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Coyotes-Wolves-Cougars.blogspot.com

Grizzly bears, black bears, wolves, coyotes, cougars/ mountain lions,bobcats, wolverines, lynx, foxes, fishers and martens are the suite of carnivores that originally inhabited North America after the Pleistocene extinctions. This site invites research, commentary, point/counterpoint on that suite of native animals (predator and prey) that inhabited The Americas circa 1500-at the initial point of European exploration and subsequent colonization. Landscape ecology, journal accounts of explorers and frontiersmen, genetic evaluations of museum animals, peer reviewed 20th and 21st century research on various aspects of our "Wild America" as well as subjective commentary from expert and layman alike. All of the above being revealed and discussed with the underlying goal of one day seeing our Continent rewilded.....Where big enough swaths of open space exist with connective corridors to other large forest, meadow, mountain, valley, prairie, desert and chaparral wildlands.....Thereby enabling all of our historic fauna, including man, to live in a sustainable and healthy environment. - Blogger Rick

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Friday, November 16, 2018

"The latest annual report in 2018 says the State of Washington has 122 wolves in 22 packs, with 14 successful breeding pairs"............. "Since the release of that report, wolf advocates say there are at least three less wolves".............. "Two more were recently added to the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife kill list".............."When wolves are suspected of killing cattle, WDFW officers investigate"................. "If wolves are behind the attacks and non-lethal methods attempted by ranchers don't stop the cattle killing, then the agency's policy is to issue a kill order".............History should not have to repeat itself in Washington State as it relates to forging some type of collaboration between ranchers and the folks representing Wolves............Do we have to have the same conflicts over and over again as experienced in the Rocky Mountain and Great Lakes States?............Is there anything to be learned from these previous 'Ranchers versus Wolves" conflicts that would bring some form of mutual co-existence paradigm to Washington, Oregon and California as Wolves re-establish themselves in their historical West Coast homelands?



Wolf war howls between western and eastern Washington

BY CAROLYN OSSORIO
NOVEMBER 12, 2018 AT 9:49 AM
An epic and contentious battle is being waged in
Washington state over the expansion of wolves.
 Len McIrvin describes the issue as a "war."
His family has been ranching for six
 generations. Today, he says wolves are
threatening their livelihood.












"It's a different world over here in the back
country, in Stevens, in Ferry, and in Okanogan
 County," McIrvin said. "It is so wild. We've got
 areas on our range where it is just a boneyard
with cow skeletons, with what bones are left of
these cows. We've got one area where you can
 almost step from skull-to-skull of dead cows,
where the wolves are running them into canyons,
 or running them into heavy timber area where
 they can't escape. It's a terrible disaster going
 on over here."





















The latest annual report in 2018 says the State of
Washington has 122 wolves in 22 packs, with 14
 successful breeding pairs. But since the release
of that report wolf advocates say there are at least
 three less wolves. Two more were recently added
 to the Washington Department of Fish and
 Wildlife kill list.
Therein lies the beef.

Wolf advocates

Amaroq Weiss, a wolf advocate from The
 Center of Biological Diversity says the WDFW
 is beholden to ranchers and continues to kill
 wolves against science and the law. Weiss'
 group has attempted to get temporary
 restraining orders and preliminary
 injunctions to halt killing of wolves. They
 have so far been unsuccessful. There is a
 lawsuit still pending over the issue. They
 argue the state is violating the environmental
 policy act.











"Because it has never conducted a scientific
analysis of their kill protocol and kill orders,"
"And the state is violating the administrative
procedures act. Because the actions they are
 taking are not being done under a reasoned
 decision making process. Quite the contrary.
Their decisions are quite irrational."
When wolves are suspected of killing cattle,
WDFW officers investigate. It wolves are behind
 the attacks and non-lethal methods attempted
 by ranchers don't stop the cattle killing, then
the agency's policy is to issue a kill order.
Recently, the WDFW has added the last two
 members of the Old Profanity Territory pack
 to a kill list.











Weiss says McIrvin is to blame for 17 of the 22
 wolf killings by the WDFW, as well as the latest
 two wolves added to the list. She argues that
McIrvin should have moved his cattle – that is
 the core problem. The cows and the wolves
are mingling an area known to be a high-wolf
use site – where wolves keep their pups.
"So the wolves are not going to go away," Weiss
 said. "The reason the cattle are being drawn
there is there are salt blocks there for the cattle.
 Not that the rancher placed them there on
 purpose … the point is that once you know
that is causing a conflict, you need to move
 the salt blocks and you need to move the cattle
 away."
Weiss says that action did not happen in 2016 or
 in 2018 when incidents happened. The rancher
 was instructed to move his salt blocks by the
agency, however, Weiss says.










"So you have a situation in which the wolves are
 being set up to attack cattle because the cattle
 are coming right into the site where they have
 their pups," she said. "And nobody is doing
anything about it."

Washington: West vs east

McIrvin says those salt blocks have been there
 for over 60 years, and moving the salt blocks
 wouldn't have made a lick of difference because
wolves are smart and they follow the food
source. He says this isn't about wolves.
"This is a plan, a program, an agenda," McIrvin
 said. "The wolf thing is an agenda. When they
hauled those wolves and dumped them on us,
it was an agenda to get cattle out of the
 mountains."
McIrvin says at the end of the day, wolf
advocates shouldn't have a say in what happens
 in the backcountry. He lays out a metaphor of
eastside cowboys starting a committee to interfere
 with, and solve, Seattle's homelessness problem.









"The wolves are terrible, they've cost us well over
 a million dollars," McIrvin said. "If there is a
problem we have to have local control … We've
got a terrible situation with wolves killing stock,
 they are putting cattlemen out of business, they
are putting sheepmen out of business."
"And for the people on the left side of the state to
 say they have a voice in this — they don't. This
 has to be a problem taken care of locally, by our
 local sheriff in each individual county," he said.
"Can you imagine the wreck if you got a
committee of a bunch of cowboys over here on
 the eastside who said 'We are going to fix
Seattle's homeless problem? It can't be done.
It's the same wreck with a bunch of people on
 the westside saying, 'we're going to fix the wolf
 problem for those people on the eastside.'"













Meantime, Weiss says they hope the lawsuits
 they have against the WDFW will bear fruit.
She says the public has become more aware
about the wolf issue.
"The agency is overseen by a commission …
and those commissioners are appointed by the
governor – Governor Jay Inslee," Weiss said. "
…I encourage everyone to call Governor Jay
Inslee. To not only call the director of WDFW,
 also call Governor Jay Inslee. The agency
 needs to be reined in. It's violating the law.
 It is not following the science. It is actually
 violating several key components of the
state wolf plan as well. And it's time to stop."
The WDFW has not responded to interview
requests.

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