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Email: timberwolfinfonetwork@gmail.com

Wolf Hunt Debate Delivers No Compromise

Posted by: Patrick Durkin

EAGLE RIVER, Wis. – Friends and foes of wolf hunting disagreed politely yet passionately during a six-person panel discussion at the recent Wisconsin Outdoor Communicators Association annual conference at the Trees for Tomorrow education center.

Even so, courtesy and mutual respect still proved powerless to deliver possible compromises on wolf-hounding and wolf-population goals as Wisconsin heads toward its third wolf season Oct. 15. Then again, maybe that’s asking too much of one 90-minute conversation between friends, adversaries and neutral parties over this contentious season.

The panel featured these six Wisconsin residents:

  • Rachel Tilseth, Menomonie, founder of Wolves of Douglas County Wisconsin, a wolf-advocacy group she founded in 2012 to remove hounds from the wolf hunt;
  • Rob Bohmann, Racine, chairman of the Wisconsin Conservation Congress;
  • Dave Mabie, Kennan, a longtime houndsman and Price County delegate to the WCC;
  • Peter David, Odanah, wolf biologist for the Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission;
  • Paul Kuhlman, St. Croix Falls, a representative of the Ice Age Trail Alliance and Polk County delegate to the WCC;
  • and Todd Schaller, Madison, chief warden of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

     

    Tilseth tracked wolves from 2000 to 2013 as a volunteer in the Wisconsin DNR’s winter tracking surveys. She opposes the wolf season, especially provisions that allow hounds to track wolves after Dec. 1. “Wolf-hounding is cruel and inhumane,” Tilseth said. “It’s a return to the days when hunters drove wolves to the brink of extinction.”

    Mabie, however, said many people – not just opponents – have misconceptions about wolf-hounding, and hound-hunting in general. Mabie has owned and trained hounds for over 30 years, and each autumn takes about 15 individuals and families on hound-hunts for bears, bobcats, coyotes and – in December 2013 – wolves.

    “(My guests) tell me it’s the most fun they’ve ever had on a vacation,” Mabie said. “They have a new understanding of how hound-hunting actually works. There’s not all this blood and fur flying around the woods like they’ve been led to believe. They can’t believe how misled they were about hunting with hounds.”

    Mabie said most wolf-hounding chases differ little from a bird dog pointing grouse or pheasants. “Putting one hound on a track is no problem,” he said. “The dog will run that wolf and bark at it until the wolf sits down, and then the dog runs circles around it, barking. If it were a bird dog with a beeper collar, the beeper would go off and you’d move in to flush the bird. The hound basically goes to point on the wolf.”

    Mabie also said hounds have little trouble learning to trail wolves, and sees no need for the hotly contested training season now being planned by the DNR and its Wolf Advisory Committee. “If you own good hounds, you put that hound on a wolf track and it will follow it,” Mabie said. “Unless you’re trying to get a straight wolf-dog, you don’t need to train hounds on wolves. They run wolves real easy without special training.”

    Meanwhile, discussions about a wolf population goal drew myriad responses. The goal in Wisconsin’s wolf-management plan is 350. The population was estimated to be about 675 this past winter, about 20 percent lower than in 2012, before hunters and trappers took 374 wolves the first two seasons.

    Many biologists and wolf advocates, however, believe the goal should be raised. They note the current 350 goal was set before wolves proved they could live in more diverse range than once believed.

    Tilseth believes the statewide goal should be 1,000 to 1,500 wolves. Bohmann questioned the accuracy of wolf estimates, but said the Conservation Congress currently backs the 350 goal. Mabie said the state shouldn’t set statewide goals. Instead, he thinks annual harvests should be based on site-specific factors like pet and livestock depredation.

    David, meanwhile, said 350 is “totally inappropriate” as a statewide goal. “There is no reason we cannot have a higher wolf population than the current goal,” he said. “That needs to change.”

    David said Wisconsin’s wolf population – as determined by “the way biologists count wolves” – would stabilize at about 1,000, given what’s now known about the species’ habitat requirements.

    Mabie, however, said many people – not just opponents – have misconceptions about wolf-hounding, and hound-hunting in general. Mabie has owned and trained hounds for over 30 years, and each autumn takes about 15 individuals and families on hound-hunts for bears, bobcats, coyotes and – in December 2013 – wolves.

    “(My guests) tell me it’s the most fun they’ve ever had on a vacation,” Mabie said. “They have a new understanding of how hound-hunting actually works. There’s not all this blood and fur flying around the woods like they’ve been led to believe. They can’t believe how misled they were about hunting with hounds.”

    Mabie said most wolf-hounding chases differ little from a bird dog pointing grouse or pheasants. “Putting one hound on a track is no problem,” he said. “The dog will run that wolf and bark at it until the wolf sits down, and then the dog runs circles around it, barking. If it were a bird dog with a beeper collar, the beeper would go off and you’d move in to flush the bird. The hound basically goes to point on the wolf.”

    Mabie also said hounds have little trouble learning to trail wolves, and sees no need for the hotly contested training season now being planned by the DNR and its Wolf Advisory Committee. “If you own good hounds, you put that hound on a wolf track and it will follow it,” Mabie said. “Unless you’re trying to get a straight wolf-dog, you don’t need to train hounds on wolves. They run wolves real easy without special training.”

    Meanwhile, discussions about a wolf population goal drew myriad responses. The goal in Wisconsin’s wolf-management plan is 350. The population was estimated to be about 675 this past winter, about 20 percent lower than in 2012, before hunters and trappers took 374 wolves the first two seasons.

    Many biologists and wolf advocates, however, believe the goal should be raised. They note the current 350 goal was set before wolves proved they could live in more diverse range than once believed.

    Tilseth believes the statewide goal should be 1,000 to 1,500 wolves. Bohmann questioned the accuracy of wolf estimates, but said the Conservation Congress currently backs the 350 goal. Mabie said the state shouldn’t set statewide goals. Instead, he thinks annual harvests should be based on site-specific factors like pet and livestock depredation.

    David, meanwhile, said 350 is “totally inappropriate” as a statewide goal. “There is no reason we cannot have a higher wolf population than the current goal,” he said. “That needs to change.”

    David said Wisconsin’s wolf population – as determined by “the way biologists count wolves” – would stabilize at about 1,000, given what’s now known about the species’ habitat requirements.

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