Grizzly bear caught in wolf trap

GREAT FALLS — A 4-year-old male grizzly bear was briefly

Photo Copyright Jim Robertson

Photo Copyright Jim Robertson

caught in a steel leg-hold wolf trap near the Rocky Mountain Front west of Dupuyer.

Fish, Wildlife and Parks grizzly bear management specialist Mike Madel says two men were checking wolf traps Tuesday afternoon when they discovered the bear with its foot in the trap. The bear had pulled the trap out of the ground, but the trap became entangled in a tree and some brush.

The trapper reported the accidental capture to state wildlife officials, who immobilized the 473-bear with a dart gun and removed the trap. Madel planned to relocate the bear, which was not seriously injured other than swelling of the toe joints.

Read more: http://billingsgazette.com/news/state-and-regional/montana/grizzly-bear-caught-in-wolf-trap/article_872d0ba0-21c2-5d5f-8b92-48166edfa702.html#ixzz2nsSxTl3v

Montana is a backward wolf massacre state

http://billingsgazette.com/news/opinion/montana-is-a-backward-wolf-massacre-state/article_4125d0d7-2f81-53b8-be26-a95b9c59af7f.html

Regarding allowing ranchers to kill perceived “threatening wolves” (Senate Bill 200): Montana policy wolf qualifies it, from wolf conservationists’ perspectives, as a backward wolf massacre state.

This attitude is evidenced by $19 tags for five wolves; not having a real quota; by having a trapping season beyond and through the hunting season; an attitude of “we need to drive down the population” without any science behind such thinking; an attitude of not holding the rancher responsible in any way for taking preventive, good husbandry, measures.

It is political management, not scientific management. Now it will be in evidence with a policy of allowing a rancher to kill a wolf “perceived” as a threat, which to a rancher and guests will likely mean any wolf seen, which will all equate to open season on wolves, with much of it on leased public land.

Wolves kill around 65 cattle annually in a state that has 5.5 million which is 0.001 percent. There are 3,776 leases on BLM land and 772 on national forest lands. Ranchers are reimbursed for losses. Oregon has a model for Montana, although Montana rule makers are too backward and obstinate to listen and learn. The Oregon wolf management model requires ranchers to have nonlethal deterrents in place and to have used them, and then only kill chronic offenders.

Wolves are not vermin. Wolves are apex predators that are good for wildlife ecology, having a positive cascading effect throughout the food chain versus ecological unhealthy man wildlife killing.

References: The Hidden Life of Wolves, Jamie and Jim Dutcher; The Wolf Almanac, Robert Busch

Roger Hewitt

Great Falls
Read more: http://billingsgazette.com/news/opinion/montana-is-a-backward-wolf-massacre-state/article_4125d0d7-2f81-53b8-be26-a95b9c59af7f.html#ixzz2nl6OgwYZ

More Kids With Guns and Evil Intent…

At least 9 elk shot in 5 minutes near Sula; young hunters cited

SULA – In a five-minute span on the day before Thanksgiving, the French Basin near Sula sounded like a war zone.

Some elk had wandered out onto an open hillside and a group of young hunters opened fire.

“Nine elk that we could account for were shot in about five minutes,” said Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks warden Lou Royce. “There were a few wounded ones that we never recovered.”

Royce wrote citations to the parents of the five young hunters who broke the law in one way or another.

“There was a lot of unethical behavior that happened that day,” he said.

People were shooting into herds of elk running across the hillside. Some were shooting right off the roadside. Others were shooting elk on private property without permission.

“We ended up finding a few dead elk that no one claimed,” Royce said. “A few of the wounded elk were killed in the next few days by other youth hunters.”

That episode and several others that occurred during the last week of hunting season in the Sula Basin has state officials, landowners and local sportsmen searching for ways to ensure that it doesn’t happen again.

Tony Jones of the Ravalli County Fish and Wildlife Association said the situation in the Sula Basin is unique in the Bitterroot Valley.

The open hillsides found there are used as winter range by elk that migrate annually out of the Big Hole Valley after the snow starts to pile up. Several landowners offer access through the block management program. And there are enough roads that allow people to drive fairly close to elk in the late part of the season.

For the most part, the only hunters allowed to shoot an antlerless elk in the area are youth between the ages of 12 and 15.

“Elk hunting has become more restrictive in the valley,” Jones aid. “Hunters figured out the most liberal part of the season, which turns out to be youth hunting.”

“It wasn’t necessarily youth doing bad things,” he said. “It was the adults with the youth who were putting the youth in bad situations.”

When situations like that occur, Jones said sportsmen worry that some landowners will close off access to their properties.

“With access getting tougher and tougher, we don’t want to lose prime acres of block management because of the actions of a few bad apples,” he said.

***

Last week, sportsmen and local landowners sat down with FWP officials to talk about what happened and to start talks on what should be done in the future.

“If done right, the youth hunting opportunities are a great thing,” Royce said. “Some of the things we were seeing were not good situations at all.”

For instance, Royce said he pulled up to one block management entry point and found a number of vehicles parked there and a large group of hunters milling about.

“There were fewer than 10 adults and somewhere around 30 to 40 kids standing there in the parking area,” he said.

It appeared that all of the 12- to 15-year-old hunters were armed.

“That’s not a good situation,” he said. “It’s a safety issue. It’s a resource issue. And it’s a legal issue, too. We don’t want to create a situation where people feel like it’s OK to break the law.”

Becky Doyle is a local landowner who is worried about the safety aspect. She said there are buildings in the Sula Basin that have bullet holes in them due to unsafe practices by hunters.

“What we saw happening up here this year isn’t what we teach kids in their hunter safety classes,” she said. “We see parents who race up a road in hopes of heading elk off and then getting out and having their kids shoot from the road. It’s unethical.”

“Unfortunately, this kind of stuff has been going on for years in the Sula Basin,” she said. “Now, instead of it being adults, it’s kids.”

Travis Goodsell of Conner spent most of the last week of the season in the area. He saw a good deal of illegal and unethical behavior as well.

At one point, he watched a father direct his son to shoot at some elk that were about 100 yards away from the edge of the road. He fired five times and didn’t hit anything.

Earlier, he saw a herd of elk that couldn’t get over a fence being pursued by about 10 people. One youngster was yelling as loud as he could in an attempt to spook them back to where a group of 16 or so young hunters were waiting.

“Half of them didn’t have parents with them,” Goodsell said. “I was up there four or five days and I probably saw 20 people leave with elk that were shot right off the road.”

***

Royce said that’s not the intention of the youth hunt.

“When a kid goes through hunter safety, they are taught the difference between what’s right and wrong,” he said. “They are supposed to have a good mentor with them as they learn how to hunt.”

When he was young, Royce said, he hunted with his father, uncle and grandfather.

“I didn’t get out of their sight until I was 16 or 17,” he said. “It was a controlled situation. My dad, uncle and grandpa were right there to make sure I did it right.”

The youth hunt is supposed to be just that.

“It can be a great thing if people do it right,” he said. “I don’t think anyone likes to see wounded or dead elk out there that no one gets to harvest. I hope we can come up with some changes that will at least cut down on some of the unethical things we saw this year.

“I think we can do better,” Royce said.

FWP regional wildlife manager Mike Thompson said it’s important that everyone realizes that same situation in the East Fork has repeated itself over the years.

Since the antlerless opportunities were now limited to youth, “we’ve kind of set them up to fail,” Thompson said. “People from all walks of life have fallen into that same trap when they see lots of elk on an open hillside.”

Thompson plans to broaden the conversation in the search of a solution.

“We want to look for a way that youth can learn in a more safe environment,” he said. “When I say safe, I mean not out on the highway shooting into a herd of elk, but instead, one on one with them in mountains, like it’s supposed to be.”

[Like it’s supposed to be? So by that logic, mass murder is bad, but serial killing is okay?]

Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2013. All Rights Reserved

Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson, 2013. All Rights Reserved

MT Sentators Host “Sportsmen’s” Town Hall

Bitterroot Valley legislators to host sportsmen’s town hall on regulation changes

HAMILTON – Two Ravalli County state senators will host a sportsmen’s town hall meeting this week on proposed changes to hunting in the Bitterroot Valley.

The meeting will be held at the Bitterroot River Inn in Hamilton on Thursday, Dec. 19 at 6:30 p.m.

Sen. Fred Thomas, R-Stevensville, and Sen. Scott Boulanger, R-Darby, will host the event.

The purpose of the meeting is to allow sportsmen to offer ideas, comments and concerns about proposed changes to the local hunting regulations, including requiring all hunters to obtain an unlimited permit to hunt elk in three of the four districts in the valley.

Other topics will include the youth cow elk season, whitetail doe seasons, hunting district boundary changes, anti-trapping initiatives and wolves.

Guest speakers include Keith Kubista of the Montana Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife, who will address the anti-trapping ballot initiative.

Safari Club Regional Representative Jon Wemple will talk about the loss of elk hunting opportunity under the

Photo Copyright Jim Robertson

Photo Copyright Jim Robertson

proposed valleywide permit system.

……Meanwhile in Oklahoma……

local OKC hunting news:

Oklahoma deer hunters have a final opportunity to take firearm into the woods
when the 10-day holiday antlerless gun season opens Saturday in most
of the state.
Deer taken during the antlerless season are not included in the hunter’s combined season limit.
Okla. state wildlife officials encourage a high doe harvest to reduce overpopulation and improve buck-doe ratio for a more healthy deer herd.

Archery deer season continues thru Jan. 15th statewide.

The Washita National Wildlife Refuge, which is located west of Butler, Okla., still has duck blinds available for three midweek hunts this season.
This refuge offers some of the best goose hunting in the state.
All the weekend dates have been filled. However, the midweek hunts are still available.

Stop Government Plans to Vaccinate & Slaughter Wild Buffalo!

There are several action alerts from Buffalo Field Campaign here:

http://org.salsalabs.com/o/2426/t/0/blastContent.jsp?email_blast_KEY=1288358

TAKE ACTION to Stop Government Plans to Vaccinate & Slaughter Wild Buffalo!
  A bull bison roars to be heard among the herd.  Photo by Kim Kaiser.  Click image for larger view.
No buffalo have been killed by hunters since our last Update. Temperatures have dropped into the negatives, snow has fallen, Hebgen Lake is now frozen, and the few wild buffalo that are in Montana are keeping themselves safe from hunters for now. As we promised last week, we have some very important Take Action items for you on two major threats to wild buffalo. Visit the links below to take action and to learn more. BFC has also just produced a new video from our footage of the recent Interagency Bison Management Plan meetings. See and hear for yourself what the agencies are saying. Please do what you can to share our alerts and video widely!
1.  Montana Department of Livestock Plans to Capture, Vaccinate & Slaughter Wild Buffalo

Urge Congress to Stop the DOL’s Plans by Cutting Off Funding for the Interagency Bison Management Plan

Contact Montana Governor Steve Bullock to Stop the Department of Livestock Before they Start!

2.  Yellowstone National Park Enlists Tribes to Slaughter Wild Buffalo Urge the National Park Service to Rescind Buffalo Slaughter Contracts and to Pull Yellowstone Out of the IBMP
Thank you so much for taking the time to raise your voice for America’s last wild buffalo!  Please spread the word to save these herds!
Wild is the Way ~ Roam Free!
* NEW BFC Video:  DOL Reveals Intent to Capture Wild Buffalo in the Hebgen Basin

The last wild buffalo populations are currently estimated at fewer than 4,600 individual animals, living in and around Yellowstone National Park. Wild bison are ecologically extinct throughout their native range in North America.

2013-2014
Total Buffalo Killed: 54
Government Capture:
Buffalo Released from Capture:
Government Slaughter:
Held for Government Experiment:
Died In Government Trap:
Miscarriage in Government Trap:
State Hunt: 3
Treaty Hunts: 51
Unknown Hunts:
Quarantine:
Shot by Agents:
Highway Mortality:
Cause of Death Unknown:

Total Killed in Previous Years
2012-2013: 261
2011-2012: 33
2010-2011: 227
2009-2010: 7
2008-2009: 22
2007-2008: 1,631
Total Killed Since 2000: 4,310

*includes lethal government action, trap-related fatalities, quarantine/experiments, hunts, and highway deaths

“Liberal’s Wolves ‘murder’ 2 women hikers”

Take cover–here comes a wolf-poodle hybrid!

I’m not going to vouch for this source (as you can see by the title and the attitude throughout the article, “badassberry” is pretty much a wacko), but here’s the word from the white-sheet-over-the-face ant-wolf fanatics. Interestingly, he uses the word “murdered” in the title, even though hunters reject when we use it for what they do to non-humans. Italics are added to denote examples of extremist anti-wolf hyperbole …

http://polymontana.com/liberals-wolves-murder-2-women-hikers/

Liberal’s Wolves murder 2 women hikers

December 2, 2013

by Dr. Ed Berry, aka badassberry

Let’s cut the politically correct crap. But for the mentally defective, wolf-loving liberals, these 2 women would still be alive. Against the objections of common sense conservatives, the environmentalist-controlled US Department of Fish and Wildlife forced non-indigenous Canadian Wolves on several states in America.

These wolves have decimated Montana’s elk herds, killed cattle on ranch lands, killed hunting dogs, and now they have killed 2 women who were hiking in Idaho’s Craters of the Moon National Monument.

Now, to protect the liberal agenda for America, government agents are hiding evidence that might clarify the horrific event.

Wolf populations, now far larger than the so-called federally required minimums, have inundated the states of Montana, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington. The feds are still adding wolf populations in Arizona, New Mexico, California, Colorado, Utah, and Texas. Wolves mate with other dog species. Dangerous wolf-hybrids have been sighted in Illinois, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

I recommend the feds put wolves in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. This is the dominant area of the Sierra Club and other eco groups who are behind the federal placement of the large Canadian wolves in America. Some day, a pack of wolves will devour a Sierra Club hiking group, armed with bear spray useless against wolves.

copyrighted Hayden wolf in lodgepoles

There’s no rest for game processors during hunting season

There’s no rest for game processors during hunting season By CHRIS CIOFFI ccioffi@billingsgazette.com The Billings Gazette
11 hours ago  •  By Chris Cioffi

The large walk-in coolers at Project Meats have been crowded the last few weeks with harvested elk and deer on their way to the dinner table.

Even more elk and deer are piled on the loading dock, waiting their turn on the butcher block….

Read more: http://billingsgazette.com/business/features/there-s-no-rest-for-game-processors-during-hunting-season/article_c4a9d25b-7ed9-522b-98f2-8753020da2a2.html#ixzz2mFa3vzvq

3 Hamilton men lose hunting privileges for killing 25 deer

“As best as we could determine, they were shooting deer for the thrill of it.”

http://billingsgazette.com/news/state-and-regional/montana/hamilton-men-lose-hunting-privileges-for-killing-deer/article_50676767-b60a-58a9-a4a0-e30af3061de8.html

HAMILTON – Three Hamilton men have forfeited their hunting privileges after being

Photo Copyright Jim Robertson

Photo Copyright Jim Robertson

found guilty of killing deer for the thrill of it last year.

One defendant told investigators the men shot as many as 25 deer, but wardens were only able to locate nine, said Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks warden Lou Royce.

“We really don’t have a clue exactly how many deer they shot,” Royce said. “One defendant said they shot between 20 and 25 deer with a .22. The deer could have run off and died in the woods or been hauled off by predators. There could still be deer out there with bullets in them.”

The case began a little more than a year ago after a landowner off the Westside Road near Hamilton called to report a poaching case.

Royce said the property owner and his son had heard a shot after dark near their home. A few minutes later, they saw headlights shine on their front yard to illuminate a deer. A moment later, a shot rang out and the deer dropped.

“The shot was made right toward the building,” Royce said.

The property owner’s son chased after the vehicle and was able to obtain a license number.

“That was our big break in the case,” Royce said.

Royce said a newspaper article in the Ravalli Republic about the poaching also led investigators to several carcasses.

“The news article helped,” he said. “People told us about a number of different deer after they had read it.”

Ravalli County Justice Jim Bailey handled all of the cases.

Gabe Rinehart, 19, pleaded guilty in August to 18 misdemeanor citations that included hunting without a license, hunting after dark, using a spotlight, as well as others.

Rinehart was fined $7,580 and ordered to pay $700 in restitution to FWP. He was sentenced to 1,980 days in jail, with all but two suspended.

Rinehart also lost hunting privileges for 20 years, but may apply with the court for reinstatement after five years.

Nicholas Cropp, 19, was found guilty of eight citations in a jury trial on Oct. 24.

Cropp was required to serve 15 days of his 1,100-day sentence in jail. He was ordered to pay $4,569 in fines, $639 in jury fees, and $800 in restitution. Cropp also forfeited a .270-caliber Savage bolt-action rifle.

Cropp lost his hunting privileges for 10 years.

Jedidiah Schmitt, 19, was sentenced on Nov. 7 for two citations for illegally killing one deer following a bench trial.

He was required to pay $1,370 in fines and $300 in restitution. Schmitt lost hunting privileges for six years. He was also sentenced to 360 days in jail, with all of it suspended.

“They later claimed that they were going to go back and get the meat, but they never did,” Royce said. “As best as we could determine, they were shooting deer for the thrill of it.”

Montana Bear Killings

Please note that the reward amount should be $7,600 instead of $6,600. Thanks!

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE November 26, 2013

Reward Increased for Tips on Grizzly Bear Shooting Northeast of Ovando

Photo of bears in the wild Copyright Jim Robertson

Photo of bears in the wild Copyright Jim Robertson

State wildlife officials continue to seek tips on the shooting death of a grizzly bear found November 3 northeast of Ovando in the Blackfoot Valley. Those that share information on the case may now receive up to $7,600 due to several private donations and a contribution from the US Fish & Wildlife Service.

Private donations, combined with $1,000 from the US Fish & Wildlife Service, bumped the reward amount from the original offering of $1,000 from Montana Fish, Wildlife & Park’s TIP-MONT program to $7,600 for tips that lead to a conviction in the case. Callers can remain anonymous and should phone 1-800-TIP-MONT ( 1-800-847-6668 ).

The female grizzly bear died of a gunshot wound and had three cubs of the year. FWP was able to trap two of the cubs and they will be transferred to the Bronx Zoo. Multiple attempts to capture the third cub were unsuccessful.

And speaking of Montana bears: http://missoulian.com/news/local/judge-fines-helena-couple-for-bucket-of-bear-paws-in/article_28dc6702-5633-11e3-a174-0019bb2963f4.html

Hunter Shoots, Wounds Montana Grizzly Bear

Grizzly survives after charging hunter, getting shot near Condon

CONDON — A female grizzly with two cubs who was shot Wednesday when she charged a hunter in the Kraft Creek drainage near here has apparently survived.

The hunter immediately contacted Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks, which tracked the bear on the ground and in the air as she moved west toward the Mission Mountains.

“The determination was made that the bear was not mortally wounded,” FWP spokesman John Fraley reported.

The hunter fired a shot after the grizzly charged to within 50 feet of him. Fraley said wardens discovered a deer carcass about 75 yards away that the grizzly and her two cubs had been feeding on.

The Flathead County Sheriff’s Department, Two-Bear Aviation and pilot Jim Bob Pierce helped FWP track the wounded bear.

The investigation continues, and Fraley reminded people to carry bear pepper spray when hunting in grizzly country, adding that experts say it is more effective than a firearm in stopping a bear.

[Great, so now there’s a wounded mother bear out there trying to avoid hunters and raise her two cubs in peace].

Photo Copyright Jim Robertson

Photo Copyright Jim Robertson