Hunting Washington Forum
Big Game Hunting => Wolves => Topic started by: wolfbait on January 23, 2019, 02:53:47 PM
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Trailer of a woman who contacted Hydatid Disease in wolf country, where the USFWS transplanted diseased wolves into Central Idaho. She lives in Custer County in Idaho. This disease can be fatal, and she had to lose 1/3 of her liver, and will be on medications like a cancer patient for the rest of her life. 100% of the wolves in Idaho are infested with Hydatid tapeworms, which Idaho didn't have previous to the illegal federal wolf introduction.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Sw7mjvCEemot0gck9y-by1jgYU32WLs0/view?fbclid=IwAR3r1oIm_gTTXt2skcX1pX4lXoQjtCiyEMomP2R4FXb2wfn32DZgyeX_Bns
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Didn't the wdfw say these Idaho wolves supposedly migrated to Washington state from Idaho and Canada.
More then likely these wolves here have this disease as well.
This wolf thing has gone way to far on our tax dollar.
It have has a huge impact on the deer, elk, moose and other wildlife you guys hunt. And I'd bet most of the funding came from the money you guys spent on your hunting licenses and drawing funds.
I'm sure glad I dont hunt this state anymore. I dont want one penny of my money going to support this kind of operation.
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It's been on the west coast since the 50's, found in sheep herds from Idaho since the late 60's, and people that get it are usually associated with raising sheep. Wish I could hear the ladies full story but from that trailer it looks more like she's just putting her problem on wolf introduction because the locals there hate how the introduction process went down.
I'm no wolf lover but the pinning the case of a rare disease that's associated with the sheep industry on wolves that are in country heavily used by sheep seems like a pretty lazy smear campaign.
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Didn't the wdfw say these Idaho wolves supposedly migrated to Washington state from Idaho and Canada.
More then likely these wolves here have this disease as well.
This wolf thing has gone way to far on our tax dollar.
It have has a huge impact on the deer, elk, moose and other wildlife you guys hunt. And I'd bet most of the funding came from the money you guys spent on your hunting licenses and drawing funds.
I'm sure glad I dont hunt this state anymore. I dont want one penny of my money going to support this kind of operation.
Yes the wolves here have it too, evidently a few people have found it in their deer and I think some moose presented with it as well.
I don't have first hand info on this though
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It's been on the west coast since the 50's, found in sheep herds from Idaho since the late 60's, and people that get it are usually associated with raising sheep. Wish I could hear the ladies full story but from that trailer it looks more like she's just putting her problem on wolf introduction because the locals there hate how the introduction process went down.
I'm no wolf lover but the pinning the case of a rare disease that's associated with the sheep industry on wolves that are in country heavily used by sheep seems like a pretty lazy smear campaign.
Show us a link that states what you claim!
In the mean time you can brush up on a few facts...
Two-Thirds of Idaho Wolf Carcasses Examined
Have Thousands of Hydatid Disease Tapeworms
“Wolf necropsies indicated the continued presence of lice (Trichodectes canis) and tape worm (Echinococcus), previously detected last year in Idaho. Wolves are most likely the definitive host of this previously unrecognized parasite in the state”. (emphasis added) "
http://idahoforwildlife.com/files/pdf/georgeDovel/The%20Outdoorsman%20No%20%2036%20Dec%202009%20-%20for%20merge.pdf
F&G Vet Continues to Mislead Commission, Public
about Both Reporting & Impact of Hydatid Disease
http://idahoforwildlife.com/files/pdf/georgeDovel/The%20Outdoorsman%20No%20%2045%20July-Aug%202011.pdf
F&G Perpetuates Ignorance with Misinformation
Read the Truth about Hydatid Disease in Humans
http://idahoforwildlife.com/files/pdf/georgeDovel/The%20Outdoorsman%20No%20%2044%20June%202011.pdf
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