stop the grizzly hunt, Protect Sacred Grizzly, sacred resource protection zone

Why One Wyoming Outfitter Volunteered To Take Liberal Media’s Fire

In Ban Grazing Allotments, Protect The Wolves, Sacred Resource Protection Zone by Twowolves1 Comment

Stop the grizzly hunt, Protect Sacred Grizzly, sacred resource protection zone

Read Full Article at: Protect The Wolves™

Herein lies the problem, People like Guide Sy Gilliland somehow have this thought pattern that slaughtering 1 of our Sacred Grizzlies is advocating for wildlife. Sy also thinks that Advocates calling for a boycott on Wyomng are delirious!

Sy Says “There’s talk of ‘boycott Wyoming,’” Gilliland says, with a note of slight bewilderment. “They’re delirious. I’m sure they think I’m delirious, too.”

Here lies the issues: The people do not come together to put their foot down, Large Advocate groups do not support little groups with alternate research.

People will never come together to boycott Wyoming sadly….

Wyomings Fish and Game has already said they will do whatever they have to, to get their target slaughter of 22 Grizzly Bears even including baiting if their harvest appears to be coming up short. We bought 2 drawing tags, before we anylized WGFs plans…

WGF has only allowed 10 days per person/tag it appears, which with only 2 non killers isnt going to be making enough difference because those 2 will only be allowed 10 days each out of a 2 month season it appears. And then WGF will actually allow more real killers into the field to insure that Wyomings Blood bath from slaughtering 22 Sacred Grizzlies reaches their goal.

So with that being said, What makes more sense? Establishing a “Sacred Resource Protection Zone” surrounding Our National Parks? Or 2 people delaying the slaughter of 2 of Our Sacred Grizzlies for a mere 20 days. We sincerely hope you will help Us to get Our Proposed SRPZ into the hunting Regulations. Along with our Research into the courts.

We have the legal minds 😉 We need you the Public to Join “The Howl” that will be heard the world over! And Yes I am ranting on just a bit here…. but it is beyond time to come together as 1 Pack and defeat these crooked lobbying and hunting orgs that still believe that they are conservationists.

Hunters can blame our wildlife all they want like Sy does below in this article but the fact remains, when hunters slaughter Record numbers of species no matter what the species is each year, Our Keystone Predators arent to blame. It is not rocket science here, it is these self proclaimed hunter conservationists that are decimating our Childrens Resources.

Please Join Protect The Wolves™ in taking these Bloodthirsty States to Court while Our Children still have these magnificent creatures left.

 

JacksonHole Wy: Sy Gilliland has been to a lot of public meetings on the topic of grizzly hunting, which he thinks is necessary, and listened to a lot of people who think it’s morally wrong.

“There is an incredible liberal element that’s moved in around Jackson Hole,” he says. “You walk in and you figure out pretty fast who is who. We’re wearing a cowboy hat, and they’re wearing yoga pants .”

Wyoming is scheduled to have its first grizzly hunt in 43 years in late summer/early fall. Thousands of hunters and activists are expected to take part in one way or another, by protesting or applying for or buying licenses. At most, 22 bears of the population of nearly 700 will be killed .

Gilliland has been an outfitter for 41 years. His $1.5 million business, SNS Outfitter & Guides, employs as many as 55 people in the fall, during hunting season. He supplements that with trail rides in the summer.

Advocating for wildlife management — to him, that includes hunting — for the landscape and conservation is not an add-on to him: It’s a part of the job. “We are North America’s first conservationists. We’re not ashamed of that.” That attitude has put him front and center in the long fight out West over grizzly hunting.

Gilliland is vice president of the Wyoming Outfitter & Guide Association, which represents approximately 350 small businesses, part of a $300 million hunting economy. The tourism economy in Wyoming is worth about $1.5 billion, he told me. He was tapped to be the spokesman on the grizzly hunt. He flew to Arizona, where he endured two days of media training, including how to recognize the buzzwords and traps that might be set by the liberal media.

“There’s talk of ‘boycott Wyoming,’” Gilliland says, with a note of slight bewilderment. “They’re delirious. I’m sure they think I’m delirious, too.”

Return of the grizzly

The question is what to do, if anything, about the bears. In 1975, the grizzly population in and around Yellowstone Park had sunk to 136, and they were named to the endangered species list. That move was a good one: There are now about 700 bears in Montana, Wyoming and Idaho, according to the National Park Service.

A year ago, the federal U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service turned management of the bears over to the states, officially removing them from the endangered species list. Wyoming and Idaho decided to allow a limited grizzly bear hunt; Montana officials are still considering whether to do the same.

The hunters will be chosen by lottery, receive training and then have to find an outfitter willing to take them into designated hunting areas. If they get a bear, it goes against the total set for the hunt; if not, they’re out of luck, and the next hunter takes a turn.

Grizzly hunting is by all accounts dangerous, which means the hunt is likely to draw world-class big-game hunters, who want the trophy; I’ve seen a grizzly once in the wild, and it was like no other sight: An enormous animal, walking on its hind legs, protohuman. Before we arrived, grizzlies were the king of the continent. Some hunters aren’t comfortable killing them at all, because of the sheer magnificence of the animal.

It’s complicated, but in Wyoming, there are two zones: In one zone, as many as a 10 bears could be killed, but the hunt shuts down if a female bear is killed. In the other – an expansion zone where bears are starting to have more encounters with humans and livestock — the maximum is a dozen. Licenses will cost $600 for Wyoming residents and $6,000 for out-of-staters.

The hunters and outfitters generally applaud the move, saying that it’s necessary. It’s not that it will generate a lot of money, they say. But “when wildlife gets out of whack … they eat themselves out of house and home,” says Gilliland. “Grizzlies will eat anything. They have taken a terrible toll on the elk calf population in the spring.”

Source: Return Of The Grizzly Hunt: Why One Wyoming Outfitter Volunteered To Take Liberal Media’s Fire