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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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Saturday, May 7, 2011

"The wolf is the enemy of civilization," he declared, "and I want to exterminate him"-- late 19th Century North Dakota bounty hunter Ben Corbin..........Unfortunately, in the 120 years that have passed since Corbin uttered this genocide-like proclamation, nothing much has changed for the majority of folks who live in regions of the USA where the few remaining Wolves, Bears, Cougars, Bobcats, Lynx and Coyotes still carve a perilous living among us 300 million+ throng of humanity......"Get rid of em", "we don't want them", "they don't belong here anymore" is the prevailing motto of our Western Ranchers, Great Lakes,Eastern, Midwestern and Southern suburban dwellers.....It is hard to believe that at the dawn of European contact in the New World(1500 AD), as many as 400,000 Wolves called North America home........ With half of them concentrated in the tall and short grass prairie lands where Bison, Pronghorn, Elk, Moose and Deer congregated in Serengeti-like herds.................And today, 1700 Wolves in the Northern Rockies, 4300 in Minn., Wisconisn and Michigan and a handful in the Alligator Refuge off of North Carolina cause us a a people to completely "FREAK" and consistantly seek ways to reduce, cull and remove them from the face of the earth.......This, despite the vast quantities of enlightened factual documentation which portray the great benefits that these trophic hunters bring to the health of our land................What really eats at my inside is the holier than thou exclamations of so many people that we must follow Gods path and live rightous lives while they have no ethical or moral problem wantonly destroying all that God created..........Digesting all of this and and with my stomach in knots because of the callousness and short-sightedness of our thoughts and actions, I would like to "spin" Thomas Jefferson's famous declaration in the following way: "That everyone of natures creation has the inalieable right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness".......Yes folks, our carnivores are sentient creatures like ourselves............they experience joy and pain................they derive satisfaction from protecting their young ones............they learn and process new information...... Read and enjoy Bruce Hampton's informative and revealing article on how smart, adaptable and fully respectful of man is our C.Lupus and C.lupus x lycaon wolf cousins................This is the only Post of the day this Sunday.............If you allow, my sermon for the day based on "Shark of the Plains: Early Western Encounters with Wolves(Bruce Hampton 1996)

Shark of the Plains:
 Early Western Encounters
 with Wolves
Bruce Hampton
1996
At the end of the nineteenth century, North Dakota's Ben Corbin,
 a former bounty hunter who claimed to have killed more wolves
than any man alive, summed up a pervasive view throughout the
West: "The wolf is the enemy of civilization," he declared, "and
I want to exterminate him."
Corbin's statement has long been considered
the traditional sentiment of most westerners towards wolves,
 but earlier in he region's history frontiersmen -- explorers,
naturalists, soldiers, missionaries, fur traders, and trappers --
enjoyed a far less contentious relationship with the predator.
Like Native Americanswith whom they often lived, these early
 travelers generally accepted wolves within the membership of New
World fauna. The animals
could be bothersome, but for the most part,
frontiersmen tolerated their presence. There were good reasons
why this was so. Unlike settlers who would follow, early westerners
were usually on the move,possessed few or no domestic livestock,
 and thus were only occasionally in conflict with wolves. But even
 more important,as they ventured into the vast grasslands
of the continent the yencountered such an abundance of wild animals
-- buffalo, antelope,mountain sheep, elk, and deer -- that most of
them did not conside rwolves competitors....
The earliest account of western wolf abundance
occurred when Coronado passed through present-day Kansas
in 1541, the expedition chronicler reporting "very great
 numbers of wolves on these plains, which go around with the cows
 [buffalo]." Two hundred years later, near what is now the
Saskatchewan-Alberta border, Anthony Hendry, the first white man to
 explore central Alberta, recorded in his diary: "Wolves without number."....
It was not until Lewis and Clark traveled up the Missouri River in
 1805, however, that anyone described wolves in greater detail.
Near the mouth of Montana's Sun River, Lewis recorded that the
 expedition was serenaded by "vast assemblages" of wolves "howling
 around us and lolling about in the plains in view at the distance of two
 or three hundred yards." Along the Yellowstone River, Clark was so
 overwhelmed by the abundance of wolves and other animals that he
 refused to estimate their number, fearing that readers would dismiss
his observations as simply "incredible."....
A few years later in 1810, Englishman John Bradbury visited the upper
 Missouri River and remarked that wolves "were almost constantly in sight."
 In 1831 in the same vicinity the artist George Catlin reported seeing as
 many as fifty to sixty wolves at a time. Prince Maximilian followed on Catlin's
 heels two years later, finding wolves "abundant" from western Pennsylvania
 to the headwaters of the Missouri River. Ten years after Maximilian, Lansford
Warren Hastings, one of the first travelers on the Oregon Trail...warned those
 following him that they should expect to pass "many hundreds of them"
each day....
As evidence of wolf abundance, these accounts must be viewed with caution.
 Few observers bothered to distinguish coyotes from wolves -- all were "wolves.
" Also both animals often followed travelers for great distances, vanishing, then
 reappearing from time to time, and thus may have only seemed more plentiful.
Despite these caveats, coyotes and wolves appear to have been relatively
common features of the West's fauna -- coyotes probably more so, although
 the dominance of wolves over coyotes is believed to have kept the latter less
numerous and widespread than today. Based upon maximum wolf densities
 known today where prey is abundant, the central continent's rich prairie
grasslands may have supported as many as two hundred thousand wolves
 -- half of the continent's total wolf population and the greatest concentration
of the predators anywhere in the world....
Frontiersmen soon developed their own jargon to distinguish coyotes from
 wolves.A coyote became a "prairie jackal," "brush wolf," "small prairie wolf,"
or "medicine wolf," after a traditional Indian name for the animal. The wolf was
called "big prairiewolf," "buffalo wolf," or "loafer," so named because wolves
 were often seen resting after gorging on a kill. In the Southwest the wolf
 was known as "lobo."
Before long, observers began to distinguish among wolves themselves.
Those foundon the prairies were larger than eastern wolves, although not so
 big as those farther north in Canada, referred to as "timber" wolves. Individual
 animals showed so much variation in size that some observers believed color
 a better gauge. By most accounts black wolves were relatively rare in colonial
America, while gray and, to a lesser extent,white or light-colored wolves
predominated.
As people traveled west to the Mississipp ivalley, some claimed they saw more
 black wolves. In 1833 in eastern Kansas,Maximilian observed so many black
and gray wolves, and so few white ones, that he became convinced they were
 wholly different species. Other travelers, however, reported just the opposite.
This confusion was reflected in the subspecies name naturalist Thomas Say
 bestowed on the first scientific specimen of a plains wolf taken in 1823 in
 Nebraska -- nubilis, derived from the Latin word nubes, meaning cloud like,
 obscure, or indefinite in origin. Elliott Coues settled the debate when he
 correctly proclaimed in 1867 that wolf colors were simply "remarkable
variations"and had nothing to do with speciation....
Another notable wolf characteristic frontiersmen recorded was fearlessness.
 Near the Judith River, a trbutary of the upper Missouri, Lewis and Clark came
 upon a "great many wolves" feasting on dead buffalo. The wolves "were fat and
extremely gentle," recorded Clark, enough for him to approach closely and kill
one with a bayonet. Even in that day and age, Clark's experience may have been
exceptional, but it suggests how unthreatening some wolves then found humans.
Native Americans who inhabited the upper Missouri...killed either no wolves or
relatively few....Wolf behavior changed after the animals learned to fear firearms
, but until that time they often were unusually bold.
Havsuccessfully scavenged behind nomadic tribes for millenia, wolves readily
 trailed the newcomers. They could always be counted on to clean up the
remain of game that hunters shot for food, particularly once they learned that
the sound of a gun often announced a meal. Sometimes a wolf appeared too
quickly to please hunters, gaining the sobriquet "shark of the plains." Lewis
and Clark were frequently annoyed when they returned to the site of a kill to
retrieve meat and found that wolves had expropriated the remainder. At one
buffalo carcass they found twenty-seven wolves who had left nothing but bones.
 Wolves so quickly discovered dead animals that the expedition's hunters
 learned to shoot only  those they could retrieve immediately....
Wolves also hung about camps, occasionally attacked a party's horses and
mules,and generally made a nuisance of themselves....Near Edmonton, Alberta,
 in 1847 the artist Paul Kane reported that eight hundred horses belonging to
trappers in the area never strayed far during winter because "their only safety
from their great enemies,the wolves, is remaining near the habitations of man.
" If Kane had any doubts that this was  true, they were soon dispelled when one
 day he hobbled his horse, briefly left it alone, and returned to find "two wolves
making a dead set at my poor horse, who was trembling with fear. One of them
 was in the act of springing at him...I instantly levelled my double-barrelled gun
and killed both, one after the other."
....Some wolves were so daring that they came directly into camps. During the
1840s traveler Rufus Sage recorded that wolves "proved a constant source of
annoyance,"running off with kettles, pans, and other camp paraphernalia. One
 "piratical pest" even made off with Sage's fur hat from his head while he was
asleep. In another instance, a companion, using his prized leather saddle as a
pillow, awoke to find a wolf had filched the saddle during the night. After "gently
drawing it from beneath the head of the unconscious sleeper," said Sage, the
 wolf "bore off his prize to devour it at his leisure." Sage assumed that such
wolves were hungry, but curiositymay have been a better explanation.
 Regardless, wolves gained a reputation for mischief. When Horace Greeley,
 famed editor of the New York Tribune, traveled
 across the West in the 1860s, he described the wolf as an opportunistic
"scoundrel," possessing a brazen cunning of "imposing caliber." To anyone
unfamiliar with the West, declared Greeley, it was impossible to "realize the
 impudence of these prairie-lawyers."
Such boldness sometimes cost wolves their lives, although ammunition was
 in such short supply on the early frontier that most people refused to waste it
 on an animal they did not consider dangerous or of little value for fur or food.
 No one shot them, said Oregon Trail traveler Lansford Hastings, because
their skins "are entirely worthless." When frontiersmen had nothing else to eat,
 however, they turned to wolves. While wintering on the Oregon coast in 1806,
 Lewis and Clark reported their not infrequent reliance on the flesh of dog and
 wolf. This may not have been as onerous as it sounds; many frontiersmen
learned from Indians to eat dog and found it quite palatable. In 1832 near
present-day Salmon, Idaho, several American Fur Company trappers recorded
 that "we killed a grey wolf which was fat, and made us a tolerable supper."....
....Although frontiersmen ate wolves as a last resort, such was not the case
when wolves turned to humans for food. Numerous records indicate that the
 predators readily fed on human corpses.(SC Maximilian traveled west during the
1830s in time to witness the results of a devastating smallpox pandemic
among Native Americans. "The prairie all around is a vast field of death covered
with unburied corpses," most of which Maximilian noted ended up as food for
 wolves.Thirty years later, the penchant of wolves for human cadavers caused difficulty
 for the United States Army. Soldiers assigned to Fort Kearney in central
 Nebraska reported that they had to bury their dead in deep holes, place
 heavy planks over the coffins, and then haul large stones to fill the graves in
order to prevent wolves from disinterring the corpses. Without these precautions,
they said, wolves almost invariably exhumed the dead.
....Wolves proved so deft at finding exposed or buried cadavers that many
frontiersmen possessed a grim fatalism about the fact. In the mid-1840s,
 Lieutenant J.W.Abert was returning home from an exploration of the Southwest
 when one of his men grew ill and died during a snowstorm in eastern Colorado.
 Unable to bury the victim, Abert simply left him, declaring it was the man's
"destiny to leave his bones on the desert prairies, where wolves howl his
 requiem."
Abert was not the first or last frontiersman to associate death with the howl of
 a wolf. Most listeners found the low, mournful quality of the sound unsettling.
 In fact the wolf's voice appears to have contributed greatly to many people's
fear and dislike of the animal. "I know of nothing so sad as the howling of wolves,"
 wrote Montana author  James Willard Schultz. "They chillingly voice deep, hopeless
 despair." A howl  possessed a quality "that made even the most lighthearted and
 careless of menpause and listen." Many persons, said Schultz, "could not bear the sound."
One of those was Frances Carrington, wife of the commander of Wyoming's
Fort Phil Kearny during the 1860s, who claimed she often went sleepless at
night due to the "frightening" and "hideous" constant howling of wolves outside
the fort.
....Not everyone heard it that way. George Catlin thought that the soft and
 plaintive howl of a wolf was the sound of a "lonesome" animal who had become
"lost in the too beautiful quiet and stillness about him." Even James Schultz
admitted that "to the true lover of nature it had a peculiar -- if perhaps
 undefinable -- charm.: Some listeners actually praised the sound. Maximilian
was camped one night in 1833 along the Missouri River when a dozen wolves
appeared on the opposite shore and "entertained us with a concert of their
sweet voices." perhaps the most generous tribute came from Thomas Farnham,
 an early traveler to the Northwest. It is remarkable, Farnham said, to realize
 thatevery morning precisely at daybreak, thousands upon thousands of wolves
raise their voices in a symphony of sound that "swells along the vast plains of
Texas to the sources of the Mississippi and from Missouri to the depths of the
Rocky Mountains."
Although wolves brazenly hung around camps, closely followed travelers,  
swiftly attacked and killed unprotected stock, and eagerly disinterred and
fed upon human corpses, most frontiersmen admitted that they stopped
short of killing people.
After many years trapping in the Rocky Mountains during the early 1800s,
Osborne Russell maintained that wolves "are not ferocious towards man and
will run at sight of him." Russell's contemporary, Canadian trapper Ross Cox,
was known for his many exaggerated tales, casting himself in death-defying
escapes from venomous rattlesnakes to flesh-eating eagles. Yet in a candid
moment Cox asserted that, unlike European wolves, "an American wolf, except
forced by desperation, will seldom, or ever, attack a human being." When
Scotsman Isaac Cowie arrived in Canada to become a fur trapper, he greatly
 feared attack by wolves. But he soon learned that "instead of men being afraid
 of wolves, the wolves were afraid of men." Even when near starvation, Cowie
 insisted, "wolves never plucked up courage to attack people."
....Despite these and other steadfast disavowals of wolf attack, people who had
little or no experience with the predators remained unconvinced. Why should a
wolf -- powerful and capable of killing prey many times its size -- not kill humans?
Fear of attack was no small matter to those persuaded of the animal's
 murderous intentions. During the mid-1800s in southeastern Wyoming, John
 Steele was traveling alone when a pack of wolves began following him. As
darkness fell, the animals came ever nearer. Unnerved, Steele shot the closest
 ones, then heard "awful sounds" that he identified as the dead wolves being
"devoured" by their brethren. When Steele observed "their glaring eyes and saw
how easily they might spring upon me, I realized, that like David, there was but
 a step between me and death." After a sleepless night, which Steele described
as nothing short of "terrible," by morning the animals had vanished.
As nineteenth-century wolf stories go, Steele's tale -- even his conviction of
being at death's door -- is more believable than most. Whenever wolves followed
 travelers who were alone and unused to such behavior, the experience could be
 unsettling. Often such tales did not stop with a sleepless night, for few writers
could resist the temptation to embellish the scene. The savage beasts killed
andate their companions, disemboweled their wives, and tore their children limb
 from limb in blood-drenched feasts of agony, gluttony, and gore. Here was yet
 another reason to believe that wolves killed and at humans: such stories
fulfilled people's expectations of what life on the wild frontier was like. Even if
 these stories were not true, they should be.
So many patently false wolf attack tales circulated throughout the nineteenth
century that it is difficult to sort out those that may have been authentic.
 George Bird Grinnell -- competent naturalist and keen student of the American
West -- believed few stories about wolf attacks. Nonetheless, one that seemed
plausible to him involved the eighteen-year-old daughter of the famous western
trapper and scout, Jim Baker. In 1881 Baker's family was homesteading in
northwestern Colorado when his daughter went out one evening at dusk to herd
some cows home for the night. "As she was going toward them," said Grinnell,
"she saw a gray wolf sitting on the hillside, just above the trail. She shouted to
 frighten it away, and when it did not move, took up a stone and threw at it. The
animal snarled at her call, and when she threw the stone, came jumping down
the hill, caught her by the shoulder, threw her down, and tore her badly on the
arms and legs. She screamed, and her brother, who happened to be near and
 had his gun, ran up and killed the wolf." Grinnell described the wolf as "a
young animal, barely full grown." Shaken and bearing the scars of the attack
 for the remainder of her life, the girl survived.(by 1881, humans had so decimated the
wolves primary foodstuffs of bison, elk and deer, that they associated humans with livestock
and their last opportunities to get a meal---people standing in their way likley invoked
aggressive responses, like Baker's daughter allegedly encountered--blogger Rick)
Another convincing chronicler was Josiah Gregg, an early trader and frequent
 traveler of the Santa Fe Trail during the 1840s. Once while traveling through
 Missouri, Gregg spotted a wolf and gave chase on horseback. After overtaking
 the exhausted animal, he struck it over the head with a wooden club, but the
club broke in two. The wolf then attacked and bit his horse; it reared and Gregg
toppled off. "I was no sooner upon my feet than my antagonist renewed the
charge," said Gregg, "but, being without weapons, or any means of awakening
 an emotion of terror, save through his imagination, I took off my large black hat,
and using it for a shield, began to thrust it towards his gaping jaws. My ruse
had the desired effect, for after springing at me a few times, he wheeled about
and trotted off several paces, and stopped to gaze at me." Realizing that he
"had the best of the bargain," Gregg took to his heels in the opposite direction.
In both these instances the attacking animal was provoked and may be seen
 as defending itself. At the very least, these accounts suggest that not all
wolves were as meek and docile as observers...professed. In light of his
experience, Gregg doubted that wolves preyed on humans, "though they
probably would if very hungry and a favorable opportunity presented itself."
Alleged wolf attacks sometimes had another source: hydrophobia or rabies....
Wolves occasionally became infected...and because they were large, quick,
 and capable of determined attack, such animals were greatly feared.
At the fur trappers' 1833 rendezvous on the Green River in western Wyoming,
 a white rabid wolf wandered into camp during two different nights and bit
 numerous people and stock animals. Exactly how many victims died as a
result is unclear, but one account claims at least thirteen people, along with
 a prized bull, which was being herded west as a nucleus for one of the first
Oregon cattle herds....By the time the rendezvous ended that summer, several
 victims had developed symptoms of hydrophobia -- irrational behavior,
fearfulness, foaming about the mouth, and inability to consume water --
and died shortly afterward....
How much fear of bodily harm exacerbated the dislike many people already
 felt for wolves is difficult to assess, but it probably played no small role in further
 darkening public opinion of the animal. Opporbrious references to wolves
surfaced in everyday western speech. "To cut your wolf loose" meant to go
 on a bender or do something outrageous, an act not infrequently associated
 with a "curly wolf" -- a mean or tough fellow. By mid-century wolves were often
compared to those other troublesome western inhabitants whom many
newcomers came to fear and loath -- Native Americans....(we demonize other creatures and
assign them with unflattering and insulting names that connote evil
....e.g. "japs, krauts, gooks, slopes, slant eyes,
etc, etc, etc--blogger Rick)
After the Sioux rebellion in Minnesota in 1862 in which some four hundred
 settlers lost their lives, citizens...sent a petition to President Abraham Lincoln
 calling for the banishment of every Sioux Indian from the state. "The Indian's
nature can no more be trusted than the wolf's," claimed the citizens. "Tame
 him, cultivate him, strive to Christianize him, as you will, and the sight of blood
 will in an instant call out the savage, wolfish, devilish instincts of the race."
....Those Indians who were elusive and difficult to engage in battle were often
 called "cowardly wolves." Speaking of warring Apaches in Arizona, Lieutenant
 Britton Davis said: "Exasperated, our senses blunted by Indian atrocities, we
 hunted them and killed them as we hunted and killed wolves."
Before the great herds of hoofed wild animals began their precipitous decline
 after the middle of the nineteenth century, early travelers recorded much about
 the relationship and their prey....Wolves killed a variety of large wild ungulates, but as William Clark observed in
1806, they mainly followed "the large gangues of Buffalw," feeding "on those that
 are killed by accident or those that are too pore to keep up with the gangue."
....Most frontier accounts agree with William Clark's observation that when wolves
 hunted buffalo they selected primarily the young, weak, sick, or disabled. How
 many actually fell to wolves can only be estimated. Reports of the number of buffalo
during the early nineteenth century vary widely...although most authorities place the
 total at no more than forty million animals. Plains Indians told frontiersmen that wolves
took as many as one-third of each year's calves. No one knows if this figure is correct,
 but based on an estimate of forty million buffalo, it suggests that more than two million
of the seven million calves produced each year were killed by wolves. Yet, because of
 a calf's relatively small size, even this daunting number would have failed to provide
enough meat to support the two hundred thousand wolves inhabiting the Great Plains
. Given an average daily requirement of ten pounds of meat per wolf, the predators
 needed the equivalent of no less than three thousand adult buffalo each and every day.
With so many wolves about, early travelers frequently witnessed the hunting and killing
 of prey, a relatively rare occurrence today. What astounded observers was how well
the predators hunted together. They "behave with great sagacity," said Rufus Sage,
and "exercise a perfect understanding and concert of action with each other on such
 occasions." Once from a high vantage point, Sage watched a pack approach an
unsuspecting buffalo herd. Most of the wolves spread out in two long parallel lines
 and waited while two of their members approached the herd from the downwind side
, singled out a victim, and began running it toward the rest of the pack. As they came
close, the two lead wolves slowed, letting others take up the chase. Each wolf bit and
tore at the flanks and hindquarters of the buffalo, then fell behind to let the next in line
 "take part in the grand race." The pack continued this relay technique until the
 exhausted and bloody victim finally fell.(like our Navy Seals stalking and killing Bin Laden...
an elite unit of warriors are both our wolves and our "Seal Team 6"--blogger Rick
....During his travels along the Platte River in the 1840s, Father Pierre-Jean De Smet
...claimed wolves successfully pursued prey using a relay strategy, a
 behavior scientists today have not witnessed. In addition he saw them run panic-
stricken buffalo over cliffs. "Then our highwaymen also go down by a roundabout
 way," said the priest, "and partake together of the fruit of their industry."
....The behavior of buffalo when wolves were about perplexed numerous observers.
 Catlin said that often herds appeared to be indifferent to individual wolves, allowing
 them "to sneak amidst their ranks, apparently like one of their own family."....From
such accounts it appears that buffalo readily distinguished between wolves they
considered threatening and those they did not. If the predators attacked, however,
 buffalo either bolted or stood their ground. Their choice may have been determined
 by their proximity to one another. When they were relatively close together, claimed
Catlin, "wolves seldom attack them, as the former instantly gather for combined
 resistance, which they effectively make."....(the dance of predator and prey finely
tuned over millenia......truly as artistic a delight as a Radio City Music Hall symphony, Tony winning
Broadway play or Oscar winning movie................a true delight to the senses--blogger Rick)
If a herd elected to flee rather than fight, wolves quickly chose one animal for pursuit,
 even leaping over the backs of other buffalo in their single-minded determination.
 Those who failed to run fast became victims. In spring and early summer, calves
 were the most vulnerable, but by late summer and autumn they were able to keep
 up with running adults. An adult buffalo brought to bay could be a formidable opponent, and wolf injury and
even death were probably quite common....
....In describing how wolves actually killed victims, observers maintained that they
either starved them by biting off their tongues or hamstrung them by severing
 tendons in their hind legs....Doubtless this may have been sometimes true,
 particularly with buffalo calves. But larger animals are much more difficult
(and hazardous) to hamstring, and this technique is rarely, if ever, observed
today in wolves. More likely they assaulted a victim's nose, neck, legs, flanks,
and particularly the haunches until it collapsed from exhaustion, shock, and
 blood loss.
....[F]ew observers failed to pass judgment on what they saw. Most sided with
 the victim, saying what was most disturbing about such death was that wolves
 often began feeding on a victim before it ceased struggling. It was shocking,
exclaimed Rufus Sage, the animal is "literally devoured alive!" Fur trader Henry
 Boller labeled wolves "sneaking wretches" for their depredations on "poor"
buffalo. After viewing wolves, "smeared with gore," bring down a victim, Boller
 was so incensed that he could not resist favoring "one gentleman with a leaden
pill to aid his digestion."(You do what you need to do to eat.......the same way we
slaughter cows, pigs and chickens in our slaughter houses.........a kill is a kill is a kill....
all animals strive to do so as quickly and efficiently as possible....it has nothing to do with
being mean...............Only the human animal with our advanced brain is capable of being mean-
blogger Rick)
One man who resisted finding fault with the hunting behavior of wolves was
George Catlin. Unlike human hunters, wolves slayed buffalo in fewer numbers
 and "for far more laudable purpose than that of selling their skins." As early
as 1832 -- long before most other observers -- Catlin prophesized that buffalo
and other wild animals soon would fall before the coming hordes of white
invaders and what he termed their "insatiable avarice." The artist then posed
 the question that western settlers with their herds of domestic livestock soon
 would answer.
What will wolves do, asked Catlin, "after the buffaloes are all gone, and they
 are left, as they must be, with scarcely anything to eat?"

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