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Wolves
#3631
05/15/06 04:12 PM
05/15/06 04:12 PM
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Joined: Mar 2006
phil
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Wanderer
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OP
Wanderer
Joined: Mar 2006
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In responce to the article in the "information on north american animals" area. The Wolf was never eradicated from Northen Minnesota,and now there are thousands. The only other state with more wolves is Alaska.It is very difficult not to hear wolves howling if one spends a few nights in the Northwoods of Minnesota. I have heard them howling within yards of me.If interested in wolves a great place to visit is the Wolf Center in Ely Minnesota. As a sidebar, the 50 or so wolves living on Isle Royal eat moose as their main source of food. At the Wolf center they have a nice arial shot of a pack of wolves stalking a Moose. Yes, I know Isle Royal is in Michigan, but it is closer to the shores of Minnesota 
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Re: Wolves
[Re: Tony Bynum]
#3633
05/15/06 10:34 PM
05/15/06 10:34 PM
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Joined: Jan 2006
Alaska
DavidRamey
Veteran
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Veteran
Joined: Jan 2006
Alaska
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Last year the State of Alaska killed 500 wolves here in Alaska to thin them down because we had way too many. I don't know how many wolves Alaska has but there are 5 packs on the Kenai Peninsula with 5-11 wolves per pack.
David Ramey Photography
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Re: Wolves
[Re: James Morrissey]
#3637
05/17/06 12:11 PM
05/17/06 12:11 PM
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Joined: Jan 2006
Alaska
DavidRamey
Veteran
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Veteran
Joined: Jan 2006
Alaska
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James, I can send you some info on Grizzly bears and moose that will update your info. I can also send you a few links from Alaska Fish & Game on bear safety.
David Ramey Photography
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Re: Wolves
[Re: Tony Bynum]
#3639
05/18/06 05:33 AM
05/18/06 05:33 AM
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Joined: Mar 2006
phil
OP
Wanderer
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OP
Wanderer
Joined: Mar 2006
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Check this out http://www.admin.mtu.edu/urel/news/media_relations/442/ A researcher at Michigan Tech wrote this, He explains that the decline in Elk herds has more to do with draught and Humans hunting them, than wolf predication. Cattle and sheep ranchers’ understandably would like people to believe wolves are to blame, because wolves will take domestic animals on rare occations.
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Re: Wolves
[Re: James Morrissey]
#3640
05/18/06 06:25 AM
05/18/06 06:25 AM
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Joined: Mar 2006
phil
OP
Wanderer
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OP
Wanderer
Joined: Mar 2006
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Thanks, I don't do allot of posting to forums, but I have a particular interest in wolves. There is quite a bit of incorrect information about wolves out there, and since I like sitting in the woods and listening to them howl,and wanting to see and hear them for years to come, I would do anything I could to help people understand them better, and for me to gain a better understanding of them. Not that your article was incorrect, but since I have a place in the arrowhead of Minnesota, I wanted to claim bragging rights on the wolf population question. Your article was accurate in every way, except for the exsitance of wolves in Minnesota.
I believe the Wolves were able to survive up here because the landscape is wet, very heavy vegetation, and in the arrowhead very rugged, and for those reasons, not only would it be difficult to hunt under those conditions, it is also difficult to farm, so I don’t think there was any reason to completely eliminate them from the area.
One last thing for Final shot, The deer population in northern Minnesota is excellent, and the Moose population is good in the arrowhead, therefore there is plenty of large prey for the packs to take, and as James wrote in his article, they also eat mice, rabbits, beaver, and other small animals they come across, since there are many lone wolves, and others traveling in pairs within the total population, this will be the only food they will have available to them other than carrion.
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