Feeds:
Posts
Comments

“He was known by the nicknames of “Limpy” or “Hoppy,” depending on who you talk to; the name comes from an old injury that left him crippled for life. His official designation was Wolf 253, part of the wolf population brought back from the verge of extinction in the northern Rockies, and one of 1,500 gray wolves that lost federal protections in March when the federal government “delisted” wolves from the Endangered Species Act.

And on March 28, 2008, he was shot dead.

Limpy wasn’t just any old wolf. His distinctive gait, walking on three legs, made him one of the more easily recognized wolves in Yellowstone. Among his pack, too, he was unique: he was taller than Wolf 21, his father and the alpha male of the Druid pack that roamed the open fields in Yellowstone’s Lamar Valley.

Wolf-watchers in the northern Rockies say Limpy grew up charging after elk at the same speed as the rest of his pack, despite the injury that hobbled him as a pup. He played an important role in the Druid pack, tending to pups and defending the pack’s main den from bears.

As a young male, Limpy left the safety and security of the Druid pack and struck out on his own. He trotted south out of Yellowstone Park, and traveled across southern Wyoming until he crossed the Utah border. A trapper chasing coyotes in the mountains 20 miles from Salt Lake City caught Limpy in one of his traps. It was November, 2002, and the first confirmed wolf sighting in Utah in 70 years.

Once, hundreds of thousands of wolves roamed the great expanse of the northern Rockies. Decimated by decades of unregulated slaughter and persecution, gray wolves were pushed to the brink of extinction. In 1973, gray wolves became one of the first animals to appear on the Endangered Species list. With the help of legal protections afforded by the Endangered Species Act, wolves in the northern Rockies had begun making a comeback when Hoppy arrived.

The wolf trapper called the US Fish and Wildlife, who sent a man down from Wyoming to fetch Limpy. The injured wolf was loaded in the back of a truck and driven to the far northern stretches of Grand Teton National Park, where he was released back into the wild two days later.

“He was a hell of a wolf,” recalls one veteran wolf-watcher. “After he was released with a hurt foot from the coyote trap, he crossed the territories of probably four hostile wolf packs in order to rejoin his old pack in Yellowstone Park.”

No one witnessed Limpy’s reunion with the Druid pack; it happened under cover of darkness. But the next morning, when one avid wolf-watcher and local photographer spotted Limpy back with his former pack, he was stunned.

“He was in bad shape,” recalled the photographer. “Must’ve been down to two and a half legs.”

Survival is a strong instinct, and so is the natural inclination of wolves to live in close-knit families and packs. Limpy was welcomed back to the Druid pack, and resumed the life he’d known years before.

Eventually, Limpy left the safety of Yellowstone and headed south again. He spent a year near an elk refuge near Jackson, then moved on toward Pinedale, feeding on elk, an occasional deer, and probably a smattering of jackrabbits and mice.

Limpy must have known that elk could be found around man-made feeding grounds, where elk are concentrated and disease is easily transmitted. Limpy was one of many wolves who preyed on elk grazing the land, helping keep the populations in check and thinning the herds of the sick and weak.

Limpy had, however, crossed into Sublette County, where local grocery stores sell bumper stickers that read “Wolves — Government-sponsored terrorists!” Some ranchers and farmers don’t hold much love for wolves, which they see only as predator… despite the fact that many animals are, by their very nature, predators. It’s a brutal fact of nature. It’s how they survive.

In the end, Limpy’s venture outside the safety of Yellowstone Park’s official boundaries proved fatal. After eight years spent traveling over thousands of miles, he was shot — along with another male and a female wolf — near the elk feeding ground a few miles outside Daniel, Wyoming on March 28, 2008. He became one of the first casualties in a resurrected war against wolves that began the day the federal government stripped Endangered Species protections from gray wolves across the northern Rockies.

Limpy’s death was reported to the state, as required under new Wyoming wolf rules, and word of his killing quickly spread across the Internet. The Salt Lake City Tribune picked up the story, and talked with several people who were fans of the old wolf with the bum leg.

“He died for nothing,” lamented Salt Lake City resident Marlene Foard. “If there was a reason to kill him, I could live with that. But there wasn’t.”

Another reader wrote in an e-mail, “I think they have no idea what they have done by killing this particular wolf.”

And Franz Camenzind, executive director of the Jackson Hole Conservation Alliance, said people knew wolves had been hanging around the feeding ground, but none had been seen attacking cattle herds or destroying human property. As Camenzind told the Salt Lake City Tribune, Limpy was “a good wolf. He covered thousands of miles and didn’t cause any trouble.”
**Special thanks to “Earthjustice” for providing this information
http://earthjustice.org/features/campaigns/limpy-the-story-of-wolf-253


 

“LAS CRUCES – Two men in separate cases in federal court last week each pleaded guilty to fatally shooting a Mexican gray wolf, a misdemeanor.

Jack Bruton, 60, of Magdalena in Socorro County, and Ron Rains, 57, of Reserve in Catron County, said they initially thought they were shooting a coyote, for which no permit is needed.
 
Bruton was cited for shooting a Mexican gray wolf, which is protected under the Endangered Species Act, on April 15, 2010. Rains was cited for shooting a lobo on Dec. 2, 2010.
 
According to monthly reports from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, a female wolf that roamed alone, designated F1154, was discovered dead under suspicious circumstances in April 2010. The wolf Rains shot appears to have been a 13-year-old female, designated F521, that was a member of the Fox Mountain Pack in New Mexico.
 
According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, after Bruton shot and killed a wolf he thought was a coyote, he took the wolf to his home where he removed a collar, fitted with a GPS device. …
  
A U.S. magistrate judge fined Bruton $250 and ordered him to pay $4,095 in restitution, including $2,095 to cover the cost of the collar and GPS device.
 
In the other case, Rains was driving through the Apache National Forest near his home in Reserve when he shot and killed a wolf he believed was a coyote. After realizing he had shot a wolf, Rains reported the matter to local law enforcement.
 
Rains had been told two days before the shooting that a wolf was in the area where it was shot, according to court records.
 
The judge fined Rains $250 and ordered him to pay $1,000 in restitution.
 
Wildlife officials last month discovered a female wolf from the Arizona-based Rim Pack dead in a case that is under investigation.”

**Special thanks to Rene Romo / Journal South Reporter from Lobos of the Southwest for providing this information!


“We petition the obama administration to:

Halt wolf hunts pending 9th District Court of Appeals decision and scientific research to confirm wolf recovery data.

Due to a 2011 budget rider (Sec. 1713), gray wolves lost federal protection under the ESA. It orders the Interior Secretary to reissue the final delisting rule published in 2009. Articles written by scientists in independent peer-reviewed journals criticized the 2009 rule for complying more with political expediency instead of best available science. This is regarded as a particularly egregious affront to the voice of the majority and to fair representation in our country. The rider circumvents the District Court’s ruling in Defenders of Wildlife, 729 F.Supp.2d 1207, and was designed to direct the outcome of a pending case without amending the underlying statute involved. We join the Union of Concerned Scientists in denouncing this action.”

Please follow the link below and sign this petition!

https://wwws.whitehouse.gov/petitions/!/petition/halt-wolf-hunts-pending-9th-district-court-appeals-decision-and-scientific-research-confirm-wolf/7g0bsswr


The wolf hunts are underway and Idaho plans to assassinate over 800 wolves, including pups and pregnant females.

PBS reports, “For the first time in years, hunting season for the once-endangered gray wolf is underway in Idaho and Montana to reduce the predator’s population. Cattle ranchers say the hunts are necessary to protect their herds, but environmentalists disagree. Science correspondent Miles O’Brien reports.”

Click on the link below to watch the video:

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/science/july-dec11/wolves_09-19.html

*Special thanks to PBS News Hour for providing this information!


 Friday, September 23, 2011 6:12 pm (information provided by http://wallowa.com/free/odfw-to-kill-two-more-imnaha-pack-wolves/article_c3c8d792-e64a-11e0-bb05-001cc4c002e0.html)

“ODFW to kill two more Imnaha pack wolves 2 comments Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife staff will kill two wolves from the Imnaha pack after confirming they were involved in another livestock loss.

The two wolves that will be targeted are the alpha male and an uncollared wolf in the pack. Data from the alpha male’s GPS collar confirm he was at the scene where the calf was killed earlier this week.

 Removing two wolves will reduce the size of Imnaha pack to two—the adult/alpha female and a pup born in spring 2011. Other wolves from the Imnaha pack moved to new areas earlier this year. “Today’s decision was not made lightly,” said ODFW Director Roy Elicker. “We’re working hard to conserve wolves in Oregon, yet be sensitive to the losses suffered by livestock owners.”

Yesterday’s investigation brings to 14 the number of livestock animals confirmed to be killed by the Imnaha pack in the past year and a half. ODFW or U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service confirmed seven losses this year (two in February, and on April 30, May 4 and 17, June 5, and Sept. 22) and seven last year. The 2011 losses are repeating a pattern similar to 2010, when the Imnaha pack wolves killed livestock April through early June and again in the fall (September). An additional two losses were determined to be probable wolf kills by this pack, including one on Sept. 7, 2011. ODFW assumed responsibility for wolf management in the eastern third of Oregon May 5, 2011, after wolves in this area were delisted from the federal Endangered Species Act. After four confirmed livestock losses in spring 2011, ODFW killed two wolves from the Imnaha pack in mid-May. Under the Wolf Conservation and Management Plan, ODFW kills wolves after chronic livestock depredation. Yesterday’s investigation scene showed clear evidence of a wolf attack. The large spring calf had been dead less than two days, yet was almost completely consumed, suggesting the entire pack had fed on it. The alpha female was observed near the investigation site the following day, and GPS collar data indicates the alpha male was with her at the time. This latest confirmed depredation occurred in the same area where livestock losses had been confirmed in May and June 2011, on private property with livestock operations near Joseph. Landowners in this area have been using numerous non-lethal measures to avoid wolf-livestock problems.”


Santa Fe Reporter, September 21, 2011  Wren Abbott
 
“There’s no gray in this issue,” Cerrillos activist Cindy Roper told attendees at a panel on animal trapping held in Albuquerque last week. “It’s very black and white.” No gray, that is, except the Mexican gray wolf, a federally listed endangered species barely hanging on to its southern New Mexico habitat. The wolf was the beneficiary of a 2010 ban on trapping in its territory enacted by former New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson—and the victim of that regulation’s recent reversal under a vote by the state Game Commission. As far as the People’s Forum on Public Lands Trapping attendees were concerned, the issue was every bit as clear-cut as Roper described. The 30 members of the public who signed up to speak at the Sept. 14 event were all in favor of overturning state regulations that currently allow trapping on public lands, including wolf territory. State law allows use of steel-jawed leg traps at least 25 feet away from trails on public land in New Mexico for catching and killing “furbearer” animals including bobcats, coyotes, badgers, weasels, raccoons and other native mammals. The regulation has drawn fire because of the traps’ penchant for catching (and often injuring or killing) nontarget animals, including domestic dogs. In fall 2010, Richardson temporarily banned trapping in the southwestern part of the state, where Mexican gray wolves were introduced in a pilot program to bolster dwindling wild populations. The wolf has been listed as endangered since the 1970s, and the federal program to assist in its recovery also began at that time. The Game Commission lifted the wolf territory trapping ban on July 21 at a meeting held in Clayton, in the far northeast corner of the state. Activists complained at the forum that the meeting was deliberately held in a noncentral location; nevertheless, the commission received letters and emails from 12,000 New Mexicans who argued to leave the ban in place. Just 2,000 weighed in on the opposite side of the argument, but the commission voted in the minority’s favor. The seven-member commission is appointed by the governor; … Martinez has voiced concern that the wolf introduction program could hurt cattle ranchers, even though US Department of Agriculture statistics show that depredation by any animal, let alone endangered wolves, accounts for a tiny fraction of cattle losses Although only approximately 50 of the wolves are left in the wild, their current status is less restrictive than a full “endangered” designation, US Fish and Wildlife Service spokesman Tom Buckley tells SFR. … According to a recent federal report on the effect of trapping on the Mexican wolf population, traps have killed at least two of the wolves in New Mexico and injured seven. Two of those each had a leg amputated. Activists argue that those seemingly small numbers are substantial in proportion to the total gray wolf population. In addition, the death of an individual wolf can have larger effects because of wolves’ complex social order, causing a pack to fracture and decreasing its chances for survival, Sierra Club Rio Grande Chapter activist Mary Katherine Ray says. “It is such a small population that I think Richardson felt like we can’t afford any losses,” Ray says. “Any loss that we can do something about, we should do something about until this population gets better on its feet.” The Mexican Wolf Recovery Program set a goal of boosting the Mexican wolf population to 100 by 2006, and since the population is still just half that, the reasons for reversing the trapping ban are unclear. None of the Game Commission members returned calls for comment before press time. But retired New Mexico wildlife biologist John Klingel didn’t pull any punches when he told the forum what he thinks. “The Game Commission’s decision to open trapping in the Mexican wolf recovery area is illogical, irresponsible and unethical,” Klingel said.”

**Special thanks to “Lobos of the Southwest” for providing this information! (http://www.mexicanwolves.org/index.php)


“When Mark Earls saw a shaggy, white wolf crossing a road in North Idaho’s Hoodoo Valley, he pulled out his cellphone to snap a picture of it. “What boggled him was that the wolf didn’t run away,” said his wife, Chelsea. “It didn’t appear to be afraid of him.” The wolf escaped from Wolf People, which operates a retail store on U.S. Highway 95 near Cocolalla, Idaho, and keeps captive wolves for viewing and filming, according to the Idaho Department of Fish and Game. The wolf apparently got out by digging underneath the fence, said Chip Corsi, Fish and Game’s regional manager. By some neighbors’ accounts, it has been seen in the area since June, acting like a stray dog. A captive wolf on the lam is a concern because it’s used to being around people. “It’s a habituated Canis lupus and it’s potentially dangerous,” Corsi said. “This thing either needs to go back into captivity or it needs to be euthanized.” Fish and Game officials have told the Bonner County Sheriff’s Department and neighbors in the Hoodoo Valley that it’s OK to shoot the animal on sight. Since it’s not a wild wolf, it’s not regulated under Idaho’s wolf season, which requires hunters to purchase a hunting license and wolf tag. A Fish and Game officer took the wolf’s picture to Wolf People owner Nancy Taylor, who confirmed that the wolf belonged to her, Corsi said. She also said that she had previously reported the wolf as dead, he said. “This was not reported to us like it was supposed to be,” Corsi said. “That’s a problem … I believe she’s required to report escapees pretty quick.” Neighbors said that a Wolf People volunteer had been taking fliers around, advertising a “lost dog” that looked like a wolf. Taylor has a state permit to keep captive wolves, and Wolf People’s website said the facility has 18 wolves. Several white wolves are pictured on the site, including a 135-pound male described as an arctic/timber wolf cross, and a 75-pound male. Some of the wolves are taken to a visitor center at the store on a daily basis, but others are kept in large enclosures at another site near Lake Cocolalla, the website said. Wolf People has been in operation for 21 years, Taylor said Wednesday, but she declined to discuss the incident. “I don’t feel free to comment at this time,” she said. “I can’t comment without knowing the facts, and I haven’t had a chance to investigate the situation.” Teresa Gavin lives in the Hoodoo Valley, about 8 miles southeast of Priest River. The picture of the white wolf was snapped on a road adjacent to her property. She keeps a sharp eye on her 4-year-old twins when they’re playing outside but thinks the wolf poses more danger to her dogs and her horse. “Let’s hope that someone finds him before any harm is done to anyone or their animals,” Gavin said of the wolf. She thinks Wolf People would have had a better chance of getting the animal back alive if the escape had been reported immediately. Chelsea Earls keeps a gun handy when her children are playing outside. She said that she and her husband have been vigilant about predators since a coyote killed the family dog last winter. “It’s not reassuring knowing there’s a wolf around,” she said. “It may be used to people, but it’s still a wild animal.” **Special thanks to Becky Kramer The Spokesman-Review for providing this information.

Michael Heath of Wolf Preservation states, “they have a duty and obligation to safely capture this animal.  Residents should report any sightings to proper authorities and guarantee it’s protection from human threats.  Authorities should properly educate residents regarding factual information about wolves and take pro-active measures to co-exist with them, not to hunt or destroy this important species.”


“They think we’ve gone away…… ………the governor’s offices and the tourist departments, that is. They predicted, and said as much, that our phone calls would die down, our interest would wane, and we would eventually give up on the wolves and let them have their massacre in peace. They don’t know us wolf sisters and brothers very well at all…….. Let’s all vow to call at least twice a week: GOVERNOR ‘BUTCHER’ OTTER (IDAHO) – 208-334-2100, GOVERNOR BRIAN SCHWEITZER (MONTANA) 405-444-3111, GOVERNOR MATT MEAD (WYOMING)  307-777-7434.   LET US TELL THEM WE WILL CONTINUE TO HAVE AN ECONOMIC AND TOURIST BOYCOTT OF THEIR STATES UNLESS AND UNTIL THEY CALL OFF THE WOLF HUNTS AND STOP PERSECUTING WOLVES!!! COMPLAIN, TOO, ABOUT INDIVIDUALS POSTING HOW THEY WANT TO BRUTALIZE WOLVES AND TELL THEM OF YOUR OBJECTIONS TO THIS NASTY BOW HUNTING AND THE UNDUE SUFFERING THAT CAUSES; THESE HUNTERS ARE TAKING SHOTS THAT THEY KNOW ARE NOT IMMEDIATELY LETHAL. TELL THEM THE SUFFERING OF BOW HUNTING AND TRAPPING IS EQUIVALENT TO ANIMAL ABUSE! Caution, Otter’s secretary likes to fight and some have hired professional public relations people to talk you down on this subject!! Keep howling!”

**Special thanks to Linda Camac, creater of this bulletin from the cause:  “Good Wolf” for providing this information!


“BILLINGS, Mont. — Wildlife advocates are urging a federal appeals panel to restore endangered species protections for wolves.

The Alliance for the Wild Rockies, WildEarth Guardians and other groups argue the judicial branch needs to “zealously guard” against a move by Congress that lifted protections in defiance of earlier court rulings.

They sued the government after Congress in April approved a budget rider taking wolves off the endangered list in five states.

The filing of their briefs in the case comes as wildlife agencies on Friday reported hunters have killed 11 of the predators since wolf seasons opened in Idaho and Montana last week.

Initial attempts to stop the hunts were denied last month by a three-judge panel of the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. A November hearing in the case is expected.”

**Special thanks to KTVB.com for providing this information (http://www.ktvb.com/news/Wildlife-groups-ask-court-to-restore-wolf-protections-129546103.html)


“This week in Montana, hunters are allowed to shoot wolf puppies. Yes, puppies.

And tthey can shoot them in the most agonizingly cruel way of all, using bow and arrow.

And it’s all ‘legal’.

Whether you agree with arguments that support hunting for sport or not, most so-called ‘ethical’ hunters would agree a clean, fast kill is the goal – no matter what species is in the cross-hairs, and only in a ‘sportsmanlike way’ that gives the hunted animal a fair chance of escape.

While we won’t discuss the ethics of hunting per se, I do offer this video to consider – especially for those of strong Christian faith.

Whatever your personal take on hunting, what is ‘sportsmanlike’ in arrowing puppies?

Is it OK to kill babies using one of the slowest and most painful of hunting methods?

Dying from an archery wound can take – up to two WEEKS, according to Benke, and then only as a result of massive infection.

Watch the video. Please watch it now.

Does a puppy deserve to die this way? For that matter, does a deer, elk or any animal deserve to be sentenced to a long, agonizing death for the purposes of human ‘sport’?

Since the controversial politically-motivated delisting of endangered grey wolves resulted in open-season on wolves in several US states, including bow-hunting season beginning Sept. 3 in Montana, wolves have intentionally – and legally – been shot and killed – Although the actual statistcs and the numbers reported keep changing.

Bowhunting season is considered legal and is permitted – although perhaps not for much longer now that this video has been released.

And yes, unfortunately, certain backwards states are legalizing – even encouraging – the hunting of newborn wolf puppies as ‘Trophies’.

Even if you think it’s OK to hunt and kill truly helpless baby animals -puppies- for sport, is it OK to torture them first?

For some reason the general public seems to feel that bow-hunting is somehow more noble, more challenging, fair or more humane than hunting with firearms.

In this video a veteranarian describes the actual, prolonged and agonizing death these bow-shot animals actually experience.

Warning – This is graphic video. It was taken over the shoulder of a hunter – documenting his legal kill using a bow and arrow.

How many feel this kind of death is justifiable in the pursuit of ‘pleasure’? And what about for baby animals?

Should bow hunting remain legal?”

**Special thanks to Cathy Taibbi is based in Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America, and is Anchor for Allvoices for providing this information.