Wolf Hunting?



measure-it

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Yep, but we control & manage the amount of deer, moose, elk, etc that we harvest to sustain the populations of said animals.
Wolves kill not only to eat, but also just to kill.
They really hurt the game populations, along with the killing of livestock.
Don't need them!
 

Eatsleeptrap

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Wolves were put here for our use, with our discretion. When wolves continually killed and consumed our ancestors yearly supply of protein, our ancestors killed the wolves and used them for warm clothes, until the wolves stopped. That took near elimination, which was their discretion. End of story. We are only one hundred years removed from that. Why would we ever let them become a problem, like our neighboring states already are, or even a potential problem, ever again? Elimination was the answer once, the way history repeats itself, it will be again. Protection of North Dakota's deer, elk, moose and my neighbors cows call for it.
 


Jiffy

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It’s ok, humans are supposed to hate wolves. I mean they’ve been our direct competitors for survival since men became men and wolves became wolves. Still are it seems.

I couldn’t care less about most wolves.

I couldn’t care less about most humans.

I still don’t want to eradicate either. I was hoping we would have learned that by now.
 

5575

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Some hero's don't wear capes, wiped out the whole pack!
FB_IMG_1765852622717.jpg
 
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7mmMag

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That picture looks AI generated. Look at the heads of some of them and the guy looks out of place.
 


Davy Crockett

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So would the white and black wolves in ND most likely be great plains variety ? The male I saw was black with a grey female and black pup. The pack sounds like all white ones. Old timers talked about seeing grey wolves once in a while, they called them timber wolves.
 
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5575

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Friend has a trail cam pic with 6 of them walking by together here in ND, pretty wild!
 

luvcatchingbass

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So would the white and black wolves in ND most likely be great plains variety ? The male I saw was black with a grey female and black pup. The pack sounds like all white ones. Old timers talked about seeing grey wolves once in a while, they called them timber wolves.
Dad used to talk about brush wolves down in our area when he was a kid. He kind of described them as a little darker than a normal coyote and obviously a fair amount bigger. We where out in the grassland back in the 2006-2008 time frame and I came across a large canine track and pointed it out to him for how large it was and where we were there is no logical large dogs around, he just looked at tit and said "yeah that's a brush wolf". I have a male Bab/GPS now that weighs 96lbs and know what his big paws look like in out loose sand and I would say they were very similar in size.


This had our crop renters crop consultant wondering what he found. I was wondering myself till I realized it was where I had taken my dogs for a run a few days earlier
Screenshot_20251217_135523_Gallery.jpg
 
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