Allowing gray wolves to naturally re-establish packs in Washington is one of the most divisive wildlife management goals in state history. Some people love wolves for their unique social structure while others hate them for the threat they pose to livestock or the competition for big game. That will never change, except perhaps in degrees. Dealing with the federal- and …
Gulliford: Wolves belong back home in Colorado (column) | SummitDaily.com
Wolves belong back home in Colorado Thank you Andrew Gulliford for a well written Piece! In January, the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission voted not to allow the re-introduction of wolves back into the state. That’s too bad because wolves are coming. They may already be here. You don’t think so? Then why is there a wolf-sighting …
Wolf photos document Washington’s newest pack | News Watch | yakimaherald.com
TWISP — When John Danielson, a retired officer for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, decided it was time to get rid of duck carcasses from hunting season, he figured he’d kill two birds with one stone, so to speak. So he drove up Highway 20 to the Loup Loup Summit, snowshoed into the woods, and dumped the birds in a …
Wolves under fire in Oregon
Some state legislators are attempting an end run around a legal challenge to the removal of the gray wolf from Oregon’s endangered species list. Late last year, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife Commission removed the gray wolf from Oregon’s endangered species list, threatening the recovery of a species that had been hunted to extinction here in the early …