Dogs Enter Wisconsin Wolf Hunt Monday

http://wuwm.com/post/dogs-enter-wisconsin-wolf-hunt-monday

by Susan Bence

Wisconsin’s second wolf hunt reaches a turning point December 2. Licensed hunters can now use up to six dogs to help track wolves. Wisconsin is the only state to allow the practice. Some celebrate the rules and others take to court.

Lucas Withrow started hunting with his dad years ago. Hunting with dogs runs deep in their family tradition. Today, Withrow raises and trains more than a dozen dogs on his property in Brodhead.

“I have a kennel of 15 hounds. Three or four dogs that I use on coyotes, and that’s all I run them on and the rest are pretty much a mix of bear and coon hounds. “

Hunting bear is Withrow’s passion.

Eight years ago, he joined the Wisconsin Bear Hunters Association and now represents the group on the DNR’s wolf advisory committee. Withrow says dogs will serve a valuable function in helping manage the state’s wolf population.

“The function would be to make sure that we use and utilize all opportunities to harvest the quotas that we are responsible for harvesting to help keep the population stable and healthy,” and Withrow adds, “it’s something else that we can enjoy with our dogs.”

Withrow rebuts criticism that the practice subjects dogs to potential violent injury or death.

“From my perspective, I would tell you a dog introduced into the woods with the intention of chasing of wolf, that’s part of the responsibility of assuming the hunt. When you assume the responsibility for pursuing the wolf, you assume the responsibility for what can happen.”

“Allowing dogs to get torn up by wolves for the enjoyment of their owners, seeking to pursue wolves in this fashion, violates animal cruelty law,” Jodi Habush Sinykin says.

She is a Milwaukee attorney and represents a collection of humane societies, conservation groups and what she calls, “mainstream hunters.” She successfully took the issue to court. Sinykin argued that the DNR failed to write rules to protect hounds used in hunting wolves.

At least during Wisconsin’s inaugural wolf hunt in 2012 – a judge issued an injunction against the use of dogs. The lawsuit now rests in the hands of the state court of appeals. Sinykin has been awaiting a decision for weeks.

“Without intervention from the Court of Appeals starting December 2, dogs will be used by their owners with the known risks of what transpires when dogs who are unleashed and unprotected and at significant distances from their handlers encroach on wolf territory,” explains Sinykin. “And as we know from 25 years of depredation payments is that dogs are maimed and killed by wolves.”

For those years, hunting wolves was illegal in Wisconsin because their numbers were scarce. During that time, if a wolf killed a dog, the state reimbursed the owner.

Now that wolves have shifted to ‘hunt and trap status’, the state will not compensate hunters, if their hounds are killed during the chase.

We may not find out how many dogs are killed during the hunt. The DNR wants hunters to report dog casualties, but they are not required to do so.

The season will end on February 28 or when hunters take the state quota of 251.

copyrighted wolf in river

11 thoughts on “Dogs Enter Wisconsin Wolf Hunt Monday

  1. Unreal. Horrible. I am stunned that this is going on. What is wrong with these people? Psychopaths for sure. I just don’t get how this can happen. Guess I am still in a state of shock.

  2. Well, here’s an interesting one from http://www.wbha.us.com/events/field-trials/ (Wisc Bear Hunters Association — field trial rules and standards web page). Rule #22 is “No physical abuse of dogs while at an event.” What does that suggest? No abuse while visible at an event, but abuse all you like while at home and whenever you’re out of the public eye? As they say elsewhere on the site, “IMAGE IS ALL.”

    Oh, and what an image it is. Flip through the photos posted on the site (“Photo of the Month”) and see the barely-older-than-a-toddler boy clutching a gun and pointing it up in a tree. See the perverts of all ages and both genders looking proud and triumphant posed with the corpses of those fearsome bears that a few moments prior had retreated wide-eyed up a tree. See the happy children seated on the ground, each holding a (live) bear cub. What happened after the photo, I wonder? Where’s the mother bear? Where’s the Wisc Dept of Natural Resources? I’ve asked them for a comment and to confirm that toddlers may shoot bears and that children may appropriate bear cubs and do whatever they wish with them.

    I think these people are hopeless, as are their counterparts in the “enforcement” agencies. They have no moral compass and lack the ability to feel empathy or sympathy or mercy. Frankly, they are — at least emotionally and mentally — descendants of those who tortured and brutalized prisoners in the death camps of WWII and every genocidal conflict since.

    How unfortunate for the world that such people exist.

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