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Wolf Meeting in Kalispell
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<blockquote data-quote="HARPERC" data-source="post: 1564738" data-attributes="member: 30671"><p>Poison plays someplace south of being a child molester most places. As a culture we can put scissors in the back of a new borns head, with majority approval, yet taking out dens of wolf pups is immoral.</p><p></p><p>Flights favor certain conditions. They've been so much more aggressive with stock killers here in WA, I thought I'd relocated. As far as what other are doing, Alberta is flying last I heard. BC focussed on increased woodland caribou numbers, and has been successful. This is their second go round, they were successful the first time, but sat on their success, and were right back where they started. I think they are coming to the end of their current five year plan-see where they go.</p><p> </p><p>One of the recommendations I don't know if they used was remote cameras, big baits in the huge cut blocks, and frozen lakes, and get airborne when wolves were actually on baits. They like the frozen lakes, bait sinks in the spring, and keeps the bears out of it.</p><p></p><p>Alberta mentioned poison once, and didn't again. Russia said they were, may or may not have. I'm not 100% certain, but poison may be one of those decisions we've surrendered to the international community.</p><p></p><p>I know 2 outfitters putting up good numbers, both are using 10-20,000 pounds of bait a season. Imagine a game department cooperative enough to drag road killed moose to you.</p><p></p><p>Snares are it. One of the folks I've mentioned has been very successful at hitting full packs. His pictures used to show up, and I told him to stop it, as I didn't think he wished to become an animal rights poster child. If you have doubts about sustaining this "harvest" he's been doing this since 1998-1999-and the same locations produce year after year.</p><p></p><p>The entire "breeding pair" terminology needs to be eliminated. I hate when groups are allowed contradictory points. We can't hunt during breeding season, as killing the parents may kill the pups. In the same breath the mythology of Uncle Scruffy, and Auntie Spitfire taking over responsibility gets regurgitated.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HARPERC, post: 1564738, member: 30671"] Poison plays someplace south of being a child molester most places. As a culture we can put scissors in the back of a new borns head, with majority approval, yet taking out dens of wolf pups is immoral. Flights favor certain conditions. They've been so much more aggressive with stock killers here in WA, I thought I'd relocated. As far as what other are doing, Alberta is flying last I heard. BC focussed on increased woodland caribou numbers, and has been successful. This is their second go round, they were successful the first time, but sat on their success, and were right back where they started. I think they are coming to the end of their current five year plan-see where they go. One of the recommendations I don't know if they used was remote cameras, big baits in the huge cut blocks, and frozen lakes, and get airborne when wolves were actually on baits. They like the frozen lakes, bait sinks in the spring, and keeps the bears out of it. Alberta mentioned poison once, and didn't again. Russia said they were, may or may not have. I'm not 100% certain, but poison may be one of those decisions we've surrendered to the international community. I know 2 outfitters putting up good numbers, both are using 10-20,000 pounds of bait a season. Imagine a game department cooperative enough to drag road killed moose to you. Snares are it. One of the folks I've mentioned has been very successful at hitting full packs. His pictures used to show up, and I told him to stop it, as I didn't think he wished to become an animal rights poster child. If you have doubts about sustaining this "harvest" he's been doing this since 1998-1999-and the same locations produce year after year. The entire "breeding pair" terminology needs to be eliminated. I hate when groups are allowed contradictory points. We can't hunt during breeding season, as killing the parents may kill the pups. In the same breath the mythology of Uncle Scruffy, and Auntie Spitfire taking over responsibility gets regurgitated. [/QUOTE]
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