This is in answer to Montana’s Fish Wildlife and Parks commissioners and to the spokesman for the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation who wrote in today’s Missoulian that he thought wolves were impacting “their” elk too much and needed to be controlled through trapping and increased “bag” limits…

Exposing the Big Game's avatarExposing the Big Game

I have the utmost respect for ungulates, yet they sometimes tend to get lazy when what they seek is within easy reach, right there in front of them. That statement (not the “utmost respect” part—the “lazy” part) could also apply to hunters who don’t hesitate to shoot half-tame elk, deer or bison right outside of park boundaries.

In one of their most telling remarks, Montana hunters have complained that wolves make elk “too hard to hunt.” Ever the lackeys, state game departments use that for an excuse to promote wolf hunting, instead of sticking up for wolves by pointing out that they are just doing their job of preventing elk from over-grazing.

The fact is, wolves keep browser and grazer populations healthy precisely by keeping them on the move, making sure they don’t get too complacent. As with human beings, inertia can set in from staying in one place, causing…

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    • Thanks for this, Maureen, Those damn RMEF-MFers! I’m going to send it on to other intereseted parties.

      The Muries are/were great naturalists and wildlife proponents. I knew Mardy Murie’s neice–she gave me a copy of one of Olas Murie’s painting books (signed to me). and I’ve had and used a copy of his Field Guide to Animal Tracks for most of my life–I quoted Olas from it in my coyote chapter.

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