View Post

Petition asking for YNP wolf hunting buffer | Local News | codyenterprise.com

In IUCNCongress, Protect The Wolves, Protect Wyoming Grizzlies, Protect Wyoming Wolves by Twowolves10 Comments

Referring to wolves as “a sacred resource,” a Native American lobbying group last Wednesday delivered a petition to Game and Fish at a public informational session in Laramie. The Protect the Wolves Pack is asking the department and the Game and Fish Commission to draw a 31-mile no-hunting buffer zone around Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks when it arranges …

View Post

Wyoming’s Congressional Delegation blatantly disregards their Public Mandates

In IUCNCongress, Oppose Welfare Ranching, Protect The Wolves, Protect Wyoming Wolves by Twowolves2 Comments

Protect The Wolves™ Pack is placing U.S. Senator John Barrasso, U.S. Senator Mike Enzi, U.S. Congressman Liz Cheney, on Notice that they are not managing the Sacred Resources properly as mandated under the Public Trust. Clearly they are managing solely for the Special Interest of the Cattle Rancher and Trophy Hunter. As Such they have no place holding Office!! Wyoming’s congressional delegation is …

View Post

Wyoming wants 150 wolves, counting those inside Yellowstone and the Reservation

In IUCNCongress, Protect The Wolves, Protect Wyoming Wolves, Protect Yellowstones Wolves by TwowolvesLeave a Comment

Protect The Wolves ™ has to question how its possible for Wyoming Game and Fish to Count Wolves that they do not even manage… Wolves from the Wind River Reservation as well as Yellowstone they somehow are including. For 1 thing the Reservation to them is like a Foreign country that they have no management capabilities over anyway. The National Parks are …

View Post

Wolves need space to roam to control expanding coyote populations

In IUCNCongress, Oppose Welfare Ranching, Protect Montana Wolves, Protect The Wolves, Protect Wyoming Wolves by TwowolvesLeave a Comment

Wolves and other top predators need large ranges to be able to control smaller predators whose populations have expanded to the detriment of a balanced ecosystem. That’s the main finding of a study appearing May 23 in Nature Communications that analyzed the relationship between top predators on three different continents and the next-in-line predators they eat and compete with. The …