Unless you have been hiding beneath a rock, you have undoubtedly heard all the hype
surrounding the Internet and the World Wide Web. Where else can you find over a
hundred thousand sites dedicated to educating you about wolves. Since its humble
beginning in the spring of 1996, the Timber Wolf Information Network's Homepage has
emerged from the thousands of sites to become the largest wolf related site on the World
Wide Web. The RLU (URL) for our site is: http://www.timberwolfinformation.org.
The site contains a multitude of wolf information. Just pick a topic; wolf history,
behavior, biology, ecology and you can find morc than enough information to make you
happy. We currently have over 400 different pages full of wolf information for you to
explore. Are you interested in learning how to track wolves? Check out our on-line "Key
to Identifying Timber Wolf Sign" by Richard Thiel. Then, try out your new tracking
skills by trying to identify tracks at our "Track Id Game." Or, lets say it's late one
Sunday night and you need to know what percent of a wolf's diet is snowshoe hare for a
school report. Simply check out our "Wolf Food Web" page and your hours of research
will be as easy as point and click.
Our site is continually expanding and updated with wolf information from around the
world, so log-on and visit often. In the near future, we plan a adding a search engine to
our site for visitors to use. With this new feature, you will be able to quickly find the
available information related to your topic. Currently, for the entire site, we have over
41,000 hits a month. With people visiting our site from all over the United States and
around the world. It is amazing at our organization, with a click of a button, can educate
thousands of people from around the world about the importance and role of the wolf in
the environment.
As educational technology continues
to grow and expand, you can bet that
the Timber Wolf Information Network
will be at the fore-front of it all. If you
would like to become a member of the
Homepage Development Committee,
feel free to contact Jason Warzinik at
jason@timberwolfinformation.org or write T.W.I.N.