-
January 31st, 2019, 03:22 PM
#1
And round n round we go......
https://toronto.citynews.ca/2019/01/...tion-in-check/
"[COLOR=#4F4F4F]The small pack, including the alpha male and female, will be moved from Michipicoten Island to Isle Royale National Park, on the U.S. side of Lake Superior, where American officials hope the wolves will help keep the moose population in check.[COLOR=#4F4F4F]“We need to get these wolves off the island, otherwise they’ll die,” said Aaron Bumstead, director of lands and economic development with Michipicoten First Nation who is co-ordinating the move with the province’s Ministry of Natural Resources and Forestry.
[COLOR=#4F4F4F]Last year, the province and the First Nation used several helicopters to move a total of 15 caribou — a threatened species in Ontario — off Michipicoten Island. Nine of the animals were transferred to the Slate Islands, and the other six to Caribou Island."
-
January 31st, 2019 03:22 PM
# ADS
-
January 31st, 2019, 03:35 PM
#2
Has too much time on their hands
I'm... I'm... speechless.
"What calm deer hunter's heart has not skipped a beat when the stillness of a cold November morning is broken by the echoes of hounds tonguing yonder?" -Anonymous-
-
January 31st, 2019, 04:58 PM
#3
Never resent growing old, Many do not get the chance.
-
January 31st, 2019, 05:41 PM
#4
-
February 1st, 2019, 08:37 AM
#5
Soo,
- they allowed the wolves to eat the almost 200 or so caribou on the island, complaining all along what to do (we told them - move or cull the wolves!!)
- the 15 caribous left were moved at the last minute - too little too late
- as predicted, now that the wolves are starving, they want to move them too - amazing way to do things!
So I ask - Why did they not move /cull the wolves to begin with ? Maybe we need a change of management / decision makers here ...
-
February 1st, 2019, 02:22 PM
#6
I watched a show last night with a wildlife biologist who was tasked with bringing back the 40 mile Caribou herd up in the Yukon region.This herd of animals was some 500,000 strong in the early 1900,s and dwindled down to 6,000 in part due to market hunting.
One strategy they used to bring back the Caribou numbers was to sterilize and neuter the alpha male and females in the surrounding wolf packs.They used to cull the wolves by shooting but this disturbed the pack system and surviving yonge pack members bred themselves, where as the alpha male and female do not allow this.
But the aboriginal elders actually for eon,s were doing a similar thing. The Chief,s would meet and discuss the wolf pack,s numbers and agree to lower them down by removing the pups at denning sites.They kept the mature breeding adults in place after this and no pups were produced for that year.
Maybe the MNR should just watch this telly show and figure it out because they did in the Yukon with hunters,aboriginals and biologists all reading from the same page.
The Caribou season is now open with every hunter getting a bull tag and the herd is in great shape.
http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/static/ho...trail_2016.pdf
Last edited by Gilroy; February 1st, 2019 at 02:26 PM.
-
February 1st, 2019, 09:25 PM
#7
Sounds reasonable with out me researching.
Note to self Gilroy and I must not agree. 

Originally Posted by
Gilroy
I watched a show last night with a wildlife biologist who was tasked with bringing back the 40 mile Caribou herd up in the Yukon region.This herd of animals was some 500,000 strong in the early 1900,s and dwindled down to 6,000 in part due to market hunting.
One strategy they used to bring back the Caribou numbers was to sterilize and neuter the alpha male and females in the surrounding wolf packs.They used to cull the wolves by shooting but this disturbed the pack system and surviving yonge pack members bred themselves, where as the alpha male and female do not allow this.
But the aboriginal elders actually for eon,s were doing a similar thing. The Chief,s would meet and discuss the wolf pack,s numbers and agree to lower them down by removing the pups at denning sites.They kept the mature breeding adults in place after this and no pups were produced for that year.
Maybe the MNR should just watch this telly show and figure it out because they did in the Yukon with hunters,aboriginals and biologists all reading from the same page.
The Caribou season is now open with every hunter getting a bull tag and the herd is in great shape.
http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/static/ho...trail_2016.pdf
"This is about unenforceable registration of weapons that violates the rights of people to own firearms."—Premier Ralph Klein (Alberta)Calgary Herald, 1998 October 9 (November 1, 1942 – March 29, 2013) OFAH Member
-
February 2nd, 2019, 09:51 AM
#8

Originally Posted by
greatwhite
Sounds reasonable with out me researching.
Note to self Gilroy and I must not agree.

Slowly but surely moving you towards the DARK SIDE. LOL
-
February 2nd, 2019, 10:11 AM
#9
"Save the balsam fir" is something I never thought Id read at any time in my entire life
-
February 2nd, 2019, 10:43 AM
#10

Originally Posted by
Ahuntr300
Soo,
- they allowed the wolves to eat the almost 200 or so caribou on the island, complaining all along what to do (we told them - move or cull the wolves!!)
- the 15 caribous left were moved at the last minute - too little too late
- as predicted, now that the wolves are starving, they want to move them too - amazing way to do things!
So I ask - Why did they not move /cull the wolves to begin with ? Maybe we need a change of management / decision makers here ...
yep, except it was more like 500-600 caribou.
this is an absolute embarrassment of wild life management... gutless decision makers fail to make the tough decision and ruined 30 years of herd re-habilitation.
A Hunt Based Only On Trophies Taken Falls Far Short Of What The Ultimate Goal Should Be - Fred Bear