1,800 WA Sheep Moved, Wolves’ Fate Still Uncertain

http://www.spokesman.com/stories/2014/sep/02/stevens-county-ranchers-move-sheep-after-wolves/
September 2, 2014

Stevens County ranchers move sheep after wolves kill 24

By The Spokesman-Review

A Stevens County family moved 1,800 sheep off private grazing land over the weekend to protect their flock from wolves that have killed at least two dozen of the animals this summer.

Dave and Julie Dashiell decided to get their sheep to safety rather than wait for state wildlife officials to track down and kill up to four wolves from the Huckleberry Pack, which is at least six strong and hunts north of the Spokane Tribe reservation.

The ranchers tried everything to thwart the attacks, said Jamie Henneman, spokeswoman for the Stevens County Cattlemen’s Association, which is working on behalf of the Dashiells. They had a full-time herder, four guard dogs, range riders and extra help from state employees, but confirmed wolf kills kept mounting, Henneman said Monday.

“There’s a point where you’ve got to decide, do you leave and hopefully stay in business, or do you stick around until there’s just nothing left,” she said.

The Dashiells know of 24 sheep they lost to wolf attacks the past few weeks and fear the actual toll could be twice that number.

On Sunday they pulled their remaining sheep off rangeland they leased from Hancock Timber Co. northeast of Hunters in southern Stevens County. The animals were moved, with assistance from state employees, to a temporary pasture and soon will be trucked to their winter range, about six weeks earlier than planned, Henneman said.

The Washington Fish and Wildlife Department shot one of the wolves, an adult female, from a helicopter on Aug. 23 and set out traps in hopes of removing up to three others from the pack. But the agency pulled its traps before the Labor Day weekend to avoid conflicts with recreationists and grouse hunters.

The state responded quickly to assist the Dashiells once it was clear wolves were attacking the flock, said Donny Martorello, carnivore section manager for Fish and Wildlife.

When wolves start preying on domestic sheep, losses can add up quickly, Martorello said Monday. “The alarm bells went off for us,” he said, and the agency worked with the rancher daily on preventing more attacks.

Now that the Dashiells have removed the sheep, the state will re-evaluate what to do next, Martorello said.

“We’re certainly concerned about the behavior, the repeated depredations,” he said. “We did remove one wolf; we don’t know if we’ve broken that pattern of depredation, that prey-switching from natural prey to sheep.”

Henneman said the cattlemen’s association sees this as a case of the state falling short of protecting livestock producers.

“If this is the precedent – that Fish and Wildlife refuses to control their animals, that the rancher has to leave – we have a private property rights crisis here,” she said. “That means anyone that owns land out here … it means you’re going to get kicked out, the predator has precedence.”

Henneman also noted that other land and livestock owners in that area may be at risk from the Huckleberry Pack.

“As soon as that pack figures out that their 1,800 sheep are gone, they’re going to move on to the next site,” she said. “This is not the end to these troubles.”

Until recently the pack had spent most of its time on the Spokane reservation but now is more active north of the reservation. The Dashiells did not know the pack was that close until the attacks began, Henneman said.

Fish and Wildlife plans to reach out to neighboring livestock owners to discuss the pack and offer help to try to prevent more attacks. The agency also is evaluating compensation for the Dashiells for the sheep injured and killed by wolves.

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At this time WDFW is not certain if lethal action will continue to be pursued. WDFW and stakeholders are meeting this afternoon and information from this meeting will be posted by WDFW Public affairs office under “Latest News” on their website’s homepage.    http://wdfw.wa.gov/index.html

7 thoughts on “1,800 WA Sheep Moved, Wolves’ Fate Still Uncertain

  1. I just spoke with WDFW Biologist Stephanie Simek (helpful and collected) who is handling issues for WDFW surrounding the Huckleberry Pack in Stevens County. Her direct line is360-902-2476. Update per Simek: WDFW staff out all weekend helping the livestock owner to move his livestock (sheep) to another private grazing allotment. It was quiet over weekend. WDFW is also working to provide human presence around the livestock grazing. At this time WDFW is not certain if lethal action will continue to be pursued. WDFW and stakeholders are meeting this afternoon and information from this meeting will be posted by WDFW Public affairs office under “Latest News” on their website’s homepage. http://wdfw.wa.gov/index.html

  2. “that Fish and Wildlife refuses to control their animals, that the rancher has to leave”..sigh.
    Things not tried: fladry fencing, guard dogs (or burros or llamas); all shown very effective at protecting sheep.

  3. Sheep Predation in WA on Public Land: The 1800 sheep were in mountainous leased public land. This is a prime example of wildlife encroachment via leases. That many sheep on this kind of land was unmanageable in terms of nonlethal management of predators, in this case wolves, and amounted to not only encroachment but also wolf or other predator bating. If the rancher had not moved the sheep on his own he should have been required to by the state wildlife agency. Nonlethal management on public/federal land should be a standard requirement, not an option; else we have continuous encroachment and predator baiting on public/wilderness land, and eventual loss of most predators. No habitat, not predators and major negative impact on all wildlife. We have too many leases, 23,000 in 16 western states, thousands on national forests. If we are to have wildlife and in particular, predators, and balance wilderness ecology, we need to do a combination of actions: 1.) Stop expanding leases and start retiring leases. 2.) Teach and require nonlethal management. 3.) Learn to live with wildlife instead of against wildlife through habitat preservation, conservation easements, putting a priority on wildlife rather than ranchers on public land or oil and gas leases. Else, the 10-13,000 year war on wildlife continues led by hunters, ranchers, farmers, extraction industries and development.

    http://missoulian.com/news/state-and-regional/sheep-moved-away-from-wolves-in-eastern-washington/article

    https://exposingthebiggame.wordpress.com/2014/09/02/1800-wa-sheep-moved-wolves-fate-still-uncert

  4. I’m really disappointed in the Spokesman’s coverage! They’re printing one-sided half-truths at best, which seem designed to escalate the fear and paint ranchers as victims. The paper needs to be flooded with outrage at this kind of shit propaganda reporting. Our eastern Washington ecosystem, species diversity, even democratic process can all be at stake here

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