Woof News & Chuff Stuff
--


  << Previous Topic | Next Topic >>Return to Index  

Wolf Reintroduction Stories ~ On the Run With Wolf B36

February 20 2001 at 11:34 AM
No score for this post
Sara Corbett ~ New York Times  (Login Wolfdancer)
Forum Owner
from IP address 24.4.254.70

-
On the Run With Wolf B36 ~ A Day in the Life
Monday, 30-Oct-00 16:32:40

On the Run With Wolf B36

The war over gray wolves has been raging ever since they were reintroduced
to
the American West five years ago. The story of one wolf's perilous life
captures the conflict between those who celebrate them and those who want to
see them dead.

By SARA CORBETT in the New York Times

This is the story of B36, a female wolf. She is lithe, with an almost pure
white chest and a dusting of brown across her powerful shoulders. Her eyes,
like those of most wolves, are a haunting, opalescent yellow. Once upon a
time,
B36 roamed northern British Columbia, a nameless wild animal in a frigid and
empty landscape, but then one day five years ago, she was darted, sedated
and
put through customs at Great Falls, Mont. At which point, for better or
worse,
B36 became an American.

Her name tells the tale of her citizenship, "B" signifying that she lives in
Idaho as opposed to Wyoming, "36" relating to her place among the 66 gray
wolves plucked from Canada by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service
over
the course of 1995-96 and relocated to the American West as wards of the
Endangered Species Act. Of these wolves, B36 was an instant standout, a good
10
pounds heavier than the average female and strikingly alert. "She just had a
strong presence about her," recalled one of the conservationists who watched
the wolf quickly shrug off the heavy-duty sedatives used during her
relocation.
"You could tell she was more determined than the others."

While the other released wolves paired up and staked out territories among
the
lodgepole pine forests of central Idaho, B36 chose to explore. For nearly
two
years, she crisscrossed 10,000-foot mountain ranges and raced up and down
the
90-mile Middle Fork of the Salmon River, blithely barging in and out of
other
wolves' territories, leaving a thoroughly perplexed team of government
biologists in her wake. And as others died -- as B26 starved to death and B4
got eaten by a mountain lion and B13 turned up shot through the stomach on
somebody's ranch -- B36 thrived.

When she finally settled down, she did it with an overachiever's zeal,
finding
a mate who was even bigger and whiter than herself and, more unusually, one
believed to be a rare native wolf -- a genuine American male. "He looked
nothing like any of the reintroduced wolves I'd seen in Idaho," said Isaac
Babcock, a young biologist working for the wolf-recovery program in Idaho.
"He
was tall, lanky and extremely white, and he had this proud, stoic stance."
The
wolf also had a ring of scar tissue circling his right front leg and a
visible
limp, suggesting that at one point he'd escaped a snare or leg trap. The Old
Man, as Babcock dubbed him, appeared to be a survivor. In the spring of
1998,
guided by signals from the radio transmitter B36 wore around her neck,
Babcock
hiked deep into the back country and discovered B36 and the Old Man high up
on
a ridge, looking after the largest litter of pups born to a reintroduced
wolf
in Idaho, nine yipping youngsters who would form the core of their pack.

By most accounts, B36's growing family, known as the White Cloud pack, was a
perfect symbol of the wolf's triumphant return to the West. Indeed, the
Northern Rockies wolf-recovery effort qualifies as one of the Endangered
Species Act's greatest success stories. In five years, the original group of
66
gray wolves has multiplied to as many as 500, while an estimated 3,000 more
currently roam the northern parts of Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin.
Fledgling populations of the endangered Mexican gray wolf are beginning to
take
hold in Mexico and Arizona as well. But an issue that riles everyone -- from
wildlife managers to cattle ranchers to the urbanite spiritualists who haunt
Internet news groups with screen names like Spiritwolf and Wolf Sister -- is
how many wild wolves this country needs, or wants, or is able to handle. If
we
owe the wolf a debt, having killed off hundreds of thousands of them during
the
great Western cattle drives of the last century, at what point do we declare
ourselves atoned? Even as the Fish and Wildlife Service is considering a
move
to reclassify gray wolves in most parts of the country from "endangered" to
merely "threatened" (the public comment period ends Nov. 13), a number of
environmental groups have warned that it's too soon to declare the wolf a
fully
restored member of the American ecosystem. And as the fate of B36 and her
pack
would come to illustrate, the revival of the species has, at times, come at
a
brutal cost.

The white cloud wolves' proximity to humanity quickly elevated their
profile.
Their territory stretched across roughly 350 square miles of Forest Service
land, encompassing two stunning sets of mountains, the White Clouds and the
Boulders. To the north was a speck-on-the-map ranching community called
Clayton, and to the south sat the celebrity-jammed resort area of Sun
Valley,
where B36 and her pack were quickly adopted as exotic, star-quality
neighbors.
The local paper ran stories on their whereabouts. Vacationing millionaires
hiked high into the hills at sunset, hoping to hear them howl. And if there
were any lingering doubts about the White Cloud pack's prosperity, they were
laid to rest in 1999, when B36 duly whelped another seven pups.

The wolves didn't know, however, that an invisible line ran through their
fertile diamond of wilderness, marking not only the border between Custer
County to the north and Blaine County to the south, but also between two
sides
of an ideological turf war. It's a conflict familiar enough to any
frontier-type town with a pretty view and a decent airport, but one that
gets
fought with particular vehemence in Idaho: the old Westerners versus the new
Westerners, the right-leaning ag folks versus the left-leaning,
mountain-biking
invaders, the ranchers versus the environmentalists. The cow people, in
other
words, versus the wolf people.

And so when B36 and her pack came down out of the hills and ate two Custer
County calves at the end of March this year, things got bad quickly. To the
ranchers who run mostly modest, family-owned outfits along the Salmon River,
wolf reintroduction had grown too successful, and Idaho's wolves -- now more
than 190 of them -- became a predatory nuisance, a threat to an already
hardscrabble way of life. Suddenly, it seemed, there were wolf tracks
everywhere, next to barns and next to pickup trucks, looping right through
herds of wandering cows. A collection of ranch mothers sent letters to
Idaho's
Congressional delegation, demanding armed guards at the school bus stops to
protect their children from wolves. When two more chewed-up calves surfaced,
a
hand-lettered sign went up in the front window of a small Clayton store:
kill
all the goddamn wolves and the people who brought them here. Meanwhile, the
citizens down in Blaine County -- routinely referred to as "bunny huggers"
and
"trust-funders" by their neighbors in Custer -- started fretting that their
beloved wolves would end up dead at the hands of a vigilante rancher.

But then the government stepped in. In an effort to keep the peace, a crew
of
biologists and Fish and Wildlife officials arrived in the White Cloud
wolves'
territory along the East Fork of the Salmon River on a crisp morning in
early
April, storing a number of steel cages in a rancher's barn and then heading
off
in a helicopter to look for the errant wolves.

This was what's known, in fedspeak, as a "control action." Because wolves in
most of the northern Rockies are listed under a special, less stringent
designation of the Endangered Species Act as a "nonessential experimental
population," the government has the authority to manage wolves perceived as
problematic -- either by relocating or killing them. The designation was a
key
concession to the livestock industry in the decadelong political struggle
over
wolf reintroduction, and one whose interpretation remains controversial. How
many dead cows mandate killing a wolf? Normally, the government tries to
find
wolves new, livestock-free territory before it resorts to killing them.
Since
Western wolf recovery began five years ago, the government has relocated 91
wolves and killed 82 more.

They found B36 easily that morning, following her signal until they spotted
her, a silvery flash on a hillside of knotty brown sage. Almost instantly,
the
wolf, who was visibly pregnant with her annual springtime litter, began to
run,
skirting the snow line beneath the lip of a ridge and streaking toward a
sheltering stand of aspen. The helicopter gave chase, hovering several
hundred
feet above the running animal as a government agent, armed with a
sedative-loaded dart gun, looked to get a clear shot. Finally, after almost
10
minutes, he found his mark, nailing B36 in the back, then watching as she
slowed, staggered and fell.

She was carried back to the ranch, slung in a net beneath the helicopter,
her
pregnant body limp, immobilized by the drugs. Before the day was out, the
crew
would capture three more wolves -- two of B36's yearling pups and her mate,
the
Old Man -- packing each wolf in snow to cool its exhausted body, and then,
after a medical examination, hefting it into one of the waiting steel cages.
Throughout it all, the wolves lay frozen in their heavy cowls of fur but
nonetheless conscious, saliva pooling from their mouths, their yellow eyes
roving. Even the ranchers who'd gathered to watch were shaken by the sight.

Late that night, after a five-hour drive north, two biologists set B36 and
the
others free at the end of a rutted Forest Service road, deep in the
Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness, one of Idaho's emptiest landscapes. B36, now
fully lucid, was the first to go. "Not to be too anthropomorphic," said Kent
Laudon, one of the biologists, recalling the night, "but she was not happy.
She
was pretty aggressive, snarling and pawing at the cage. She was clearly a
dominant animal, even more aggressive than her mate. And she was out of
there,
fast."

The hope was that she would settle into her new territory and give birth to
her
pups, due sometime within the month, and that supported by her mate and the
two
relocated pack members, B36 would remain the matriarch of an intact wolf
pack.
It was hoped, too, that the other wolves -- the five or six of B36's
offspring
still living in the White Clouds -- would, with the disruption of their pack
structure, stop feeding on ranch cows.

But wild animals being wild, it simply didn't go that way. Almost
immediately,
another dead calf turned up on the same ranch on the East Fork of the
Salmon;
under pressure from the ranchers, federal officials returned by helicopter,
with orders from the Fish and Wildlife Service to shoot and kill the
remaining
members of the White Cloud pack.

Over the course of two days in April, Rick Williamson, a government trapper,
killed five wolves with a 12-gauge shotgun, while one wolf escaped to the
brush. Melodie Baker, an East Fork rancher and Custer County commissioner
who
witnessed the last of the dead wolves being dragged from the helicopter,
described it as "the most gut-wrenching, emotional thing" she'd ever seen.
But
nobody, it seemed, was more affected than the gunner, Williamson himself,
who
emerged that day from the helicopter looking stricken. Collecting the
carcasses, he'd been shocked to discover a telltale ring of scar tissue on
one
of the dead wolves' front legs. It was the Old Man, the native-born alpha
male,
who'd somehow limped his way back home through more than 160 miles of
wilderness in just two weeks. And if that wasn't bad enough, more worrisome
news was soon to filter in: B36, now widowed, heavily pregnant and far from
home, had gone missing.

It fell to a biologist named Curt Mack to find B36. in the month following
the
death of B36's mate, Mack, the soft-spoken scientist who heads the
wolf-recovery project in Idaho, and members of his staff flew over western
Idaho in a chartered Cessna, trying in vain to pick up a signal from the
missing wolf's radio collar.

The absence of a signal could be interpreted any number of ways, from a
simple
transmitter malfunction to the unlikely possibility that B36 had somehow
traveled out of the airborne biologists' range. They did come across the two
yearlings who'd been relocated with B36, only to find that they, too, had
not
followed the prescribed plan, having separated and crossed the border into
Montana, evidently leaving behind their mother, who was due to drop her new
pups any day. Since radio telemetry collars are rigged to emit a
quick-pulsing
"mortality signal" when a wolf stays still for more than eight hours, Mack
remained hopeful that B36 was still alive, that she'd found herself an
out-of-the-way den site, perhaps under a rocky outcropping that blocked the
radio signal. "The question is whether she's managed to keep any of her pups
alive," said Mack in early June. "That's the tougher thing to guess."

In the meantime, news of the White Cloud pack's demise had ripped through
Ketchum, the outdoor-jock mecca of 5,000 that serves as the municipal center
of
Sun Valley. If relations between Blaine and Custer counties were previously
strained, they were now disastrous. One ticked-off Ketchum newspaperman
devoted
his column to a ruthless takedown of ranching, calling cattle "the most
worthless, destructive, misplaced, dumb creatures ever to be introduced into
the American West." A conservationist named Lynne Stone collected signatures
on
a "cease fire" letter, accusing the Fish and Wildlife Service of
"slaughtering"
a thriving wolf pack to make up for the loss of a few cows. Bereft
Ketchumites,
said Stone, were stopping her in the aisles of the grocery store, anxiously
asking for news of B36 and any surviving pups. "Single moms do sometimes
make
it," an embattled Ed Bangs, Fish and Wildlife's regional wolf-recovery
coordinator, told a local newspaper.

Reassurances from Bangs did little to soothe the residents of Ketchum, nor
did
comments from Curt Mack regarding the better-than-decent odds that B36 was
alive. For many in Blaine County, the issue was a philosophical one: as much
as
the ranchers feel there are too many wolves in Idaho, many in Sun Valley
believe fervently that there are too many cows. For years, local
environmentalists have agitated, with mixed success, for the government to
limit cattle grazing on publicly held property, citing trampled riverbanks,
contaminated streams and soil erosion caused by overgrazing. And where more
directly affected species like the imperiled salmon and the bull trout have
failed to galvanize widespread public support for these efforts, the wolf --
mysterious, soulful and photogenic -- makes an excellent poster child.

Accordingly, Idaho ranchers often complain of feeling powerless -- not just
against calf-snatching wolves and the federal government that reintroduced
them, but against the out-of-staters who stuff the pockets of powerful
prowolf
advocacy groups. In what may be viewed as a classic bit of retaliatory
legislation, Representative Mike Simpson of Idaho recently wrote a bill
calling
for the reintroduction of wolves in the Catskills. His colleague,
Representative Helen Chenoweth, has suggested they belong in Central Park.
And
even with control actions designed to allay some of the ranchers'
helplessness,
antiwolf sentiment in Idaho still periodically bubbles over into
vigilantism.
In the last year, several wolves have been found poisoned by Compound 1080,
an
F.D.A.-banned substance.

"I see no way around wolves dying," said Carter Niemeyer, the Fish and
Wildlife
Service wolf-recovery coordinator for Idaho, who condemns vigilantism but
supported the decision to relocate B36 and ultimately kill off her pack.
"Plain
and simple, they're going to be acceptable in some places and not in
others."
Yet as 4,000-square-foot log cabins pop up on secluded mountaintops and
thousands of cows ramble across public land all over the West, the line
between
wilderness and civilization has become increasingly scumbled. And as wolf
populations escalate, as the number of mountain lions multiplies in many
states
and with the government moving forward in its plan to restore the grizzly
bear
to parts of Idaho and Montana, the boundaries appear to be more and more
permeable. Anyone who has lost a flower bed to marauding deer or unwittingly
sacrificed the family cat to coyotes knows the conflict in its most suburban
incarnation: wild animals are bound to trespass. They simply can't be
expected
to know better.

Or can they? Lamenting the situation with B36, Curt Mack says he often
wishes
for "more tools" to deter wolves from preying on cattle. Along these lines,
the
government is considering several ways of conditioning wolves to avoid
livestock -- from harassing them with rubber bullets to warning them off
with
sirens. In Montana, after one pack of wolves helped itself to a few calves
outside of Yellowstone this spring, their lives were spared by none other
than
Ted Turner, who consequently opened up his Flying D Ranch near Bozeman for
an
experiment in "aversive conditioning" sponsored by several environmental
groups
and the Fish and Wildlife Service. There, three of the misbehaving wolves
have
been outfitted with electric shock collars and put in a pen with a healthy
beef
calf, where they now are learning, the hard way, to live side by side with
cows.

To some environmentalists, the contradiction here is rich. It's not the
wolves
who need a good-neighbor lesson, they argue, but rather the humans who
should
learn to live with wolves before trying to tame them. "What's wrong with us,
when we're putting shock collars on wolves?" said Jon Marvel, an Idaho
conservationist. "They're wolves, for God's sake! If we're going to do that,
why don't we just put Purina out for them?"

One day in early July, an independent pilot named Bill Stewart was flying
along
the north fork of the Salmon River, not far from the Idaho-Montana border
and a
good 70 miles from the spot where B36 had been relocated, when suddenly the
missing wolf's radio signal started to ping, rising like a pulse from the
deep
timber. Stewart, who was carrying a scanner as a favor to the wolf-recovery
team, immediately called Curt Mack. Mack then dispatched a 31-year-old
biologist named Marcie Steiger to find the wolf on the ground, check on her
health and see if any pups had survived. Steiger remained skeptical about
the
possibility of pups, knowing the burden B36 would have faced, hunting alone
with additional mouths to feed. "Just the fact that she turned up alive was
like, wow!" Steiger said. "We thought we'd lost all of them."

Steiger spent nearly a week listening to B36's signal from the top of an
abandoned fire tower north of Gibbonsville, a small town, but could not
pinpoint her location. The wolf eluded her. In the meantime, a forest fire
had
started to burn just 10 miles to the south, scenting the air with smoke and
casting an eerie gray haze over the horizon. Late one afternoon, after
another
fruitless day of trying to spot B36, Steiger and a volunteer left their
lookout
at the fire tower and started back down the mountain. Midway down the
deserted
gravel road, inspired by some vague impulse, the biologist flipped on her
radio
scanner. "B36's signal just started to boom in," said Steiger. "I thought,
Hmm,
that's weird. Then we came around a corner and there she was, lying in the
sun,
right on the road. She was huge. She looked like she stretched from one side
of
the road to the other. It blew me away." Even more startling was Steiger's
secondary discovery, made as B36 quickly disappeared into the woods. Against
all odds, she had two pups with her. "And she looked healthy," said Steiger,
still excited a number of weeks later. "She looked really good, and her pups
did, too."

B36 had been missing just about three months. During that time, Rick
Williamson, the trapper who'd killed her mate, reportedly received a death
threat on his answering machine, presumably from an angry wolf supporter. A
group of Sun Valley environmentalists had begun plotting to physically
interfere with future government control actions on wolves. On the other
side,
a group calling itself the Central Idaho Wolf Coalition had formed with the
express intent of running the wolves clear out of Custer County. Not long
after, the Idaho Republican convention passed a unanimous though largely
symbolic resolution calling for the immediate removal of all reintroduced
wolves. Despite Idaho wolf recovery's many successes, the future of the
state's
wild wolves is hardly guaranteed.

And though she couldn't have known that, B36 left Idaho sometime late this
summer, crossing the Continental Divide and taking up residence in Montana,
in
a wide green valley known as Big Hole. Miraculously, she and her two pups
have
been reunited with one of the yearling wolves from her original pack. But
there's some bad news, too. According to the biologist Kent Laudon, who
recently spent a week at Big Hole looking for B36, it seems that Idaho's
great
she-wolf has jumped from the frying pan into the fire, for Big Hole has
traditionally proved to be just that for wolves -- a big hole. In the last
three years, the government has moved two wolves out of the area and shot
two
more after conflicts with livestock. The last signal he picked up on B36,
Laudon said, put her within about half a mile of a privately owned ranch.
"She's back where she started, really," he said, sounding somewhat dejected.
"She's right back in cattle country."
------------
Sara Corbett is a writer living in Portland, Me.

http://www.nytimes.com/library/magazine/home/20001029mag-wolf.html



Sara Corbett

 
Scoring disabled. You must be logged in to score posts.Respond to this message   
AuthorReply
Cathy Curby
(Login Wolfdancer)
Forum Owner
24.5.174.173

A Family of Wolves

No score for this post
April 2 2001, 10:29 AM 

A Family of Wolves


[This is the text of a presentation given by a Refuge biologist to the public.]

Good afternoon. My name is Cathy Curby, and I'm a wildlife biologist
working for the US Fish and Wildlife Service at the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge in northeast Alaska.

We commonly think of wildlife research as moose surveys or vegetation
analysis, but I do a different type of science. I watch wild animals in
undisturbed settings, to learn about how they spend their time, and how
they interact with others. I've spent hundreds of hours watching caribou
walk, wild sheep feed, and wolves sleep. During those times, I'm sometimes
fortunate enough to catch an enlightening glimpse into a wild animal's
life. The story I'll share with you today is one such glimpse. It's a true
story that I observed while working on a wolf project in the Arctic Refuge.
Like much work of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, this one was a
partnership, between the Service, the National Park Service, and the
University of Alaska - Fairbanks.

There were three of us that summer watching the pack of wolves. We camped
along a river about 2 miles from the wolf den, and rotated 6 hour shifts,
watching the animals from a small tent three quarters of a mile from the
den. We used a spotting scope on a tripod to view the wolves, and recorded
our observations into notebooks.

That summer, the wolf pack included eight adults and four pups. They lived
on a mountainside, where a small, deep hole on a rocky ledge served as a
den for the mother and pups. The adult wolves were not easy to tell apart
because all of them in this particular pack were tan-brown color except
one. The mother wolf was white. A wolf of great value and importance in the
pack, we referred to her as Pearl when we wrote about her in our notebooks.

This wolf pack hunted up into the mountains for Dall sheep, and down onto
the river valley for caribou. They also caught ground squirrels and
ptarmigan (arctic birds very similar to grouse and chickens).

A week before this story occurred, Pearl had moved the pups to a new
location about three quarters of a mile north of the den site. Scientists
are not sure exactly why mother wolves move their pups. Some suggest the
pups are moved away from the filth and fleas that have accumulated around
the den, or moved to a location less accessible to predators or where they
can more safely and successfully practice their hunting skills. Whatever
the reason, such moves are so universally common in wolves that scientists
have given the name "rendezvous site" to this new location. The word
rendezvous in French means "all meet together" and that's just what
happened in this case. Over the following week, as they each returned from
their travels, the wolves discovered the pups were no longer at the den
site. The adults searched until they found the rendevous site, and
thereafter returned there from hunts.

Now look through the spotting scope with me, and we'll begin our
observations of "A family of wolves." ...

It's morning, a week after the pups were moved to the rendezvous site.
Notice that the puppies are alone now. All the adult wolves are away
hunting. I record into my notebook: 8 am, partly sunny with high overcast
skies, little wind, and a temperature of 52 degrees Fahrenheit. I write
that the pups are lying quietly among an open patch of 6 foot high willows,
and I wait, along with the pups, as the minutes tick by.

Later in the morning, while scanning the surrounding mountains and river
valley, I see Pearl trotting steadily back home. She's been away from her
pups for a number of hours, and is heavy with milk. The pups have nothing
to drink except her milk, so they wait thirsty as well as hungry when the
adults are away.

What's this? Pearl passes below the willows where her puppies wait, and
continues on until she arrives near the den. Surely she remembers where she
left the pups? Pearl lies down on the sand and gravel of the mountain side,
and I record her actions in my notebook, and resume my watch.

In a few minutes, another wolf trots up to Pearl and lies down nearby.
Because all the wolves except Pearl are brown, it's not possible to know if
any one of them is male or female unless they happen to urinate, and even
then I only know until they duck out of sight and I lose track of which
wolf is which. Just like dogs, female wolves squat and males lift a leg.
Since I don't know if this newly arrived wolf is a male or a female, I just
refer to it in my notebook as the babysitter.

Pearl and the babysitter wolf lie a few feet apart from each other for
about ten minutes. I don't notice any noises or body movements, but they
are looking at each other. How do they communicate? Does Pearl indicate "go
get the pups and bring them back to me."? She doesn't speak those words,
but that's what the babysitter wolf attempts to do.

The babysitter wolf gets up, trots slowly north across a quarter mile of
low, widely-spaced willows, across a quarter mile of steep, unstable, rough
rocks and cobbles called a talus or scree slope, and across a quarter mile
of dense, 6-foot high willows. When it reaches the pups, they greet it with
wild enthusiasm. (Ok, you're right, I don't know if it is wild enthusiasm.
Scientists are careful not to assign human emotions to wild animals'
actions. So let me tell you what the pups do, and you decide for yourself).
The pups run up to the babysitter wolf, their tails wagging so much that
their hips wag. Their hips wagging so much that their shoulders wag. Their
shoulders wagging so much that their heads wag, and their heads wagging so
much that their noses wag.

Adult wolves don't have hands or backpacks with which to carry food back to
the pups, so after a successful hunt, adults bring home chunks of meat in
their stomachs. The pups indicate their hunger by jumping up and pulling on
an adult's jowls (the upper lips along the side of a wolf's mouth) with
their sharp little puppy teeth. The hungrier they are, the harder they bite
and pull. If the adults have eaten recently, this jumping and pulling by
the puppies causes them to regurgitate the meat back up and onto the ground
for the puppies to eat.

While I watch, the puppies throw themselves up toward the babysitter's
face, all four of them pulling energetically with their sharp little teeth
on the jowls of the adult wolf. When they have a free moment, they jump
back and forth, up and down, race around the newly arrived wolf, and yip.
After a few minutes of this, the puppies realize that the babysitter wolf
has no food for them, and they calm down.

After another 5 minutes with the puppies, the babysitter wolf (does it
remember that it has a job to do?) walks back toward the den, crossing the
tall willows, picking its way across the talus slope, and crossing the
short willows. When it arrives next to Pearl, it turns to look behind
itself. If it were a human, I would say it was gesturing, "See, here are
the puppies I was supposed to bring." But the pups are not there.

When the wolf pups were old enough to stay alone, Pearl joined the other
adults in the hunt. Before she left the pups for the first time, she taught
them when to follow her and when they should stay near the den: if she
walked away slowly - at the speed short puppy-legs could keep up with - the
pups were to accompany her; but when she walked away at an adult pace, they
were to stay where they were until her return.

Being well trained, the puppies know not to follow an adult walking at a
normal adult pace, so they didn't follow the babysitter wolf. They are
still waiting back at the rendezvous site. The babysitter wolf lies down
near Pearl.

Do the two wolves communicate again? It seems that Pearl indicates
something because soon the babysitter wolf rises and walks back toward the
pups, across the low willows, the talus slope, and the tall willows. When
it enters the clearing where the puppies wait, they mob it again, wagging
all the way up to their noses, and pulling energetically on the adult's
jowls. But there is still no food for them, and soon the babysitter wolf
moves off toward the den again.

This time the babysitter takes only a few steps before it stops and looks
back toward the puppies. The puppies scamper up to the adult, and the
babysitter wolf walks off again. Over and over, the babysitter wolf takes a
few steps and then waits for the puppies to join it. They travel in this
halting manner most of the way through the tall willows. But then the
babysitter wolf no longer stops to allow the puppies to catch up (did it
think they would follow automatically now?). Whatever the reason, the
babysitter wolf walks through the rest of the tall willows, across the
talus slope, and across the low willows. When it reaches Pearl this second
time, it looks behind itself (again it looks to me like it's indicating
"now here are your puppies"), but there are still no puppies. The
babysitter wolf lies down near Pearl.

Do the two wolves communicate again? Soon the babysitter wolf rises and
walks back north. This time, when the pups see it coming, they aren't as
energetic, wagging only as far forward as their hips, and jumping less
forcefully around the mouth of the adult wolf. Again the babysitter wolf
stays for a few minutes with the puppies, and then moves off south toward
the den. But this time it tries a new technique (did Pearl somehow remind
it about walking slowly, or does it realize on its own?). As the babysitter
moves away from the puppies, it moves with exaggerated slowness,
s-l-o-w-l-y lifting one foot, then s-l-o-w-l-y putting it down, before
s-l-o-w-l-y lifting the next foot. It travels at this snail's pace across
the willow clearing. The puppies watch this spectacle with what from a
human I'd call "questioning glances," but they do follow the adult wolf all
the way through the tall willows.

So far, so good. But when the puppies get to the talus slope, they refuse
to follow the babysitter wolf out onto the sharp and unstable rocks. The
babysitter wolf notices they're no longer close behind it. Itself part-way
across the talus slope, it turns to face the puppies, lowers its front
shoulders, raises its hindquarters, wags its tail, and jumps up and down
with its front paws extended, yipping. It looks to me like the babysitter
wolf is indicating "Come on. Follow me. You can do it."

But try as it may, the babysitter wolf is unable to entice any of the
puppies out onto the talus slope. Finally it walks back to the puppies at
the edge of the rocks.

Already the babysitter wolf has learned a great deal about how to work with
young wolves. It has discovered under what circumstances they will stay
when you leave, and how to have them follow when you want them to travel
with you. At this new impasse the babysitter wolf pauses. It appears to me
like the wolf is thinking of new actions to try, in its attempt to get the
puppies home.

Now the babysitter tries pushing. It stands behind a puppy, lowers its
head, and gently pushes the puppy from the rear end, nudging it forward
onto the rocks. But the puppy stumbles over the rough surface, yips, and
runs back off behind the other wolves. Pushing doesn't work.

The babysitter wolf pauses. Is it thinking of another method?

Next the babysitter wolf tries carrying. It turns away from the talus,
picks up a puppy by the scruff of the neck, and turns back toward the rocks
to carry the puppy across. When it swings the puppy across the rocks,
however, the puppy's hind end hits hard against the sharp stones. The puppy
yips. The babysitter wolf opens its mouth and drops the puppy, and the
puppy runs off the rocks behind the other wolves. Carrying doesn't work.

It looks like the babysitter wolf has run out of ideas. It walks back to
the clearing in the tall willows, followed by the puppies. It hasn't
figured out how to move the young wolves over the talus slope yet, but on
it's walk back to the willows, it demonstrates that it has learned the
proper pace to use when walking with baby wolves. The five animals lie down
around the clearing, and after recording all this in my notebook I wait to
see what the babysitter wolf will do next.

I don't have to wait more than a few minutes before the babysitter wolf
rises. It indicates by it's slow walk (now just the right speed for young
wolves) that the puppies should follow. They all walk through the tall
willows, and again come to a halt at the edge of the talus slope.

The babysitter wolf walks a few steps out onto the rocks, while the puppies
huddle together on the soil nearby. As it did before, the babysitter turns
to face the puppies, lowers its front shoulders, raises its hindquarters,
wags its tail, and jumps up and down with its front paws extended, yipping.
It jumps and yips over and over again, progressively adding more bounce to
the jumps and more volume to the yips. It jumps and yips for a minute and
more.

Finally, one pup steps out onto the rocks of the talus slope. The adult
wolf becomes even more energetic and noisy, and it backs slowly away from
the puppies while still jumping and yipping. The puppy takes another
tentative step, doesn't have any major problems, and continues very slowly
picking its way across the sharp, unbalanced stones toward the babysitter
wolf. Now a second puppy moves out onto the talus slope. It misses it's
footing, stumbling between two rocks, but it picks itself up and slowly
continues forward. The babysitter wolf moves backward toward the den, still
with great energy. A third puppy follows the other two out onto the rocks.
By now there is a string of wolves across the talus slope - the babysitter
moving backwards with jumps and yips, and three tiny pups spread out and
slowly picking their way across the steep slope.

When the babysitter wolf arrives at the end of the talus slope, it
continues moving backwards, and leads the pups easily across the low
willows. As soon as the young wolves see their mother lying on the gravel,
they race past the babysitter wolf, lie down with their mother, and nurse.
The babysitter wolf follows behind, then lies down close to Pearl and the
feeding pups.

I am bouncing up and down with excitement. The babysitter wolf tried
repeatedly, learned new skills as it progressed, and finally succeeded in
getting three of the pups back to their mother.

But one puppy never found the courage to follow the others across the talus
slope. It has returned by itself to the tall willows, where it lies very
quietly in an unobtrusive shadow. This puppy has never been alone before.
It's always been at least with its brothers and sisters. I write in my
notebook that it looks scared and lonely.

Can wolves count? Do Pearl and the babysitter wolf know that there's a pup
missing? Will Pearl go get the final pup, now that the babysitter wolf has
brought most of her puppies to her?

Somehow, the adult wolves are communicating again. The babysitter wolf
appears to know that it should go and bring back the final pup, because the
babysitter wolf rises, crosses the low willows, the talus slope, and the
tall willows, and finds the missing pup in the willow clearing.

When the babysitter wolf arrives, the single puppy races over to it,
wagging from tail to nose, and jumps all over the babysitter wolf. After a
few minutes with the pup, the babysitter wolf walks slowly back to the
talus slope, followed by the puppy. The babysitter wolf walks a few steps
out onto the rocks, while the puppy waits on the soil nearby. As it did
before, the babysitter turns to face the puppy, lowers its front shoulders,
raises its hindquarters, wags its tail, and jumps up and down with its
front paws extended, yipping. It jumps and yips over and over again,
progressively adding more bounce to the jumps, and more volume to the yips.
It jumps and yips for a minute and more. But never does the puppy try
walking on the talus rocks.

Head drooping, the babysitter wolf gives up and walks back to the willows
with the puppy. Both wolves lie down, a little ways apart. They remain
lying for fifteen minutes. This is by far the longest the babysitter wolf
has stayed at the willows during the attempt to get the puppies home. Has
the wolf given up? Is it thinking of additional things to try, to get the
puppy back to Pearl? Is it hoping Pearl will come and get her puppy
herself? What would you do, if you were the babysitter wolf?

Oh look, the babysitter wolf is up, slowly walking through the willows and
sniffing the ground. The adult seems to be walking around aimlessly. The
puppy, still lying down, watches it.

Scattered among the willows are a few pieces of bone and horn that wolves
brought to the rendezvous site over the past week. The babysitter wolf
picks up one end of a caribou leg bone in its teeth. The wolf shakes the
bone, turns its body left and right, and growls softly. It looks to me like
a dog playing tug-a-war with a bone.

It looks like that to the puppy, too, who bounds over, grabs the other end
of the bone, and tries to pull and shake it away from the adult wolf. The
two wolves play this way for a number of minutes, growling and shaking the
bone. The adult, being larger, moves backward pulling the puppy left,
right, uphill and downhill around the clearing and through the willows.

It slowly becomes clear to me, even though the wolves are moving in all
four directions, and appear to be moving randomly, that the babysitter wolf
is ever so slowly moving more toward the south (toward the talus slope)
than in any other direction.

Sometimes while they are playing, the puppy lets go of the bone, bounces
backward and then leaps forward to grab the bone again. When the two wolves
are half way to the talus slope, the babysitter wolf changes the game. Now,
it moves mostly just south. But more significantly, when the puppy leaps up
for the bone, the babysitter wolf lifts its head at the last minute, moving
the bone just out of reach of the puppy. The younger wolf stares up at the
bone and leaps again. Again, the babysitter wolf moves the bone up and away
at the very last second. The puppy is unable to get the bone. It knows it
had it earlier. Surely it can get it again?

All the while, the babysitter wolf is very slowly backing toward the talus.
The puppy leaps again and again, with eyes only on the bone. The babysitter
wolf shakes the bone close in front of the puppy's nose, growling softly,
but each time the puppy leaps, the babysitter moves the bone just high
enough so the puppy can't quite reach it.

The puppy looks and acts completely mesmerized by the bone. It doesn't
notice when the babysitter wolf very slowly moves out onto the talus slope.
It's focus is completely upward, toward the bone it can't quite catch. In
this way, the babysitter leads the puppy across the rough stones, then
through the low willows, the puppy always watching and leaping toward the
bone. When the puppy is close enough to notice Pearl, it abandons the bone,
races over to lie next to its mother, and begins energetically nursing. The
babysitter wolf wags its tail and lies down nearby.

I am stunned. Pearl had confidence that the babysitter wolf would succeed.
During the two hours it took to bring her puppies home, she never
intervened in any way. And I was overwhelmed by the babysitter wolf. It
never gave up. It stayed focused on the task, and overcame one challenge
after another. It even used a tool of sorts to distract the last puppy and
lead it safely home. This glimpse into the behavior of a family of wolves
taught me a great deal about how wolves interact and solve problems. It
even taught me many lessons to improve my own mothering and childcare skills.

 
Scoring disabled. You must be logged in to score posts.
Current Topic - Wolf Reintroduction Stories ~ On the Run With Wolf B36  Respond to this message   
  << Previous Topic | Next Topic >>Return to Index  
Create your own forum at Network54
 Copyright © 1999-2009 Network54. All rights reserved.   Terms of Use   Privacy Statement  
Come On Home