BOISE, Idaho - It's open season for hunting wolves across much of Idaho's backcountry.
The state's second public hunt started Tuesday in the 13 separate hunting zones across the state.
State wildlife managers approved the public hunt, a new set of rules and dates earlier this year as part of its effort to control the predator's population.
The Idaho Department of Fish and Game estimates that about 1,000 wolves now roam the state. While the agency has not set a target for the number of wolf kills during the seven-month season, managers have set caps for certain zones.
Officials say they intend to manage the population so it remains above 150 animals and 15 breeding pairs. Idaho held its first public wolf hunt in 2009, but a federal lawsuit scuttled last year's hunt.
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Idaho WOLF hunt is OPEN
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grizzaholic
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Idaho WOLF hunt is OPEN
"What I'm saying is: You might have taken care of your wolf problem, but everyone around town is going to think of you as the crazy son of a bitch who bought land mines to get rid of wolves."
Justin Halpern
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Re: Idaho WOLF hunt is OPEN
Looks like we will be hunting next year. We have an agreement with the Feds that is supposed to be sue proof that allows a hunting season in the "trophy areas" which is essentially the north west corner of the state that surrounds Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks. The rest of the state will treat them as predators where they can be harvested without a limit or a season or a license as long as the kill is reported to the state.
I have seen two wolves within easy shooting distance in the last three weeks, while riding my rzr around in the mountains.
I will be packing a tag next season.

I have seen two wolves within easy shooting distance in the last three weeks, while riding my rzr around in the mountains.
I will be packing a tag next season.
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grizzaholic
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Re: Idaho WOLF hunt is OPEN
I would pack a firearm, but that is just me.Wedgebuster wrote:Looks like we will be hunting next year. We have an agreement with the Feds that is supposed to be sue proof that allows a hunting season in the "trophy areas" which is essentially the north west corner of the state that surrounds Grand Teton and Yellowstone National Parks. The rest of the state will treat them as predators where they can be harvested without a limit or a season or a license as long as the kill is reported to the state.
I have seen two wolves within easy shooting distance in the last three weeks, while riding my rzr around in the mountains.
I will be packing a tag next season.
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"What I'm saying is: You might have taken care of your wolf problem, but everyone around town is going to think of you as the crazy son of a bitch who bought land mines to get rid of wolves."
Justin Halpern
Justin Halpern
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Re: Idaho WOLF hunt is OPEN
Adopt A Wolf!!
https://secure.defenders.org/site/SPage ... d3.app220a" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Save Wolves from Senseless Slaughter!
Despite Recent Victory, Threats to Wolves Still Loom
In August 2010, Greater Yellowstone wolves won a key court victory when a federal judge restored their endangered status under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), but the the fight for their recovery is far from over. Our wolves are at continued fatal risk in places like Idaho, Montana and Wyoming as hostility toward wolves in the northern Rockies region continues to escalate - with possibly deadly consequences.
Meanwhile in Alaska, over 1,000 wolves have been slaughtered from the skies through the brutal practice of aerial hunting. With the Alaska Board of Game continuing to allow the unscientific and unnecessary practice of aerial wolf killing, this could be another bloody year for Alaska's wolves. Learn more about Gray Wolves and the threats they face >>
Once virtually eliminated from the lower 48 United States, wolves are clawing their way back from extinction since Defenders and others successfully fought for their re-introduction into Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho in 1995.
On August 5, 2010, a federal judge overturned a decision by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to remove gray wolves from the Endangered Species Act (ESA), restoring their endangered status and paving the way for these critical predators to rebuild their numbers to ecologically sustainable levels. This ruling is the result of a lawsuit brought against the FWS in 2009 by Defenders of Wildlife and other conservation organizations.
While this court ruling is a great win for wolves, many challenges remain. There will undoubtedly be some people who oppose this decision. Defenders will continue to work hard in all our efforts mentioned above to ensure the wolves have a lasting future in the region. Defenders is committed to the long-term survival of the Northern Rockies wolves and other imperiled wildlife. We will continue to work in the field, in the courts and in Washington to ensure healthy, interconnected populations and ecosystems.
Meanwhile, Alaska continues its brutal program of allowing the aerial hunting of wolves. Through this barbaric practice, aerial gunners shoot wolves from aircraft, or chase them to exhaustion. Then they land and shoot the helpless wolves at point-blank range. Defenders is fighting this practice in Alaska and also working to pass the Protect America's Wildlife (PAW) Act in Congress which would nationally ban the unscientific and unnecessary practice of aerial hunting.
And in the Southwest, fewer than 60 wolves struggle to maintain a foothold in the wild as anti-wolf forces rally to eliminate their very existence. We're on the ground in Arizona and New Mexico, countering anti-wolf misinformation to ensure that these endangered wolves have a future in the Southwest.
But our work doesn't stop there. To help ease the financial burden of livestock losses attributed to wolves, we compensate ranchers.. We also implement efforts to reduce livestock/wolf conflicts, so that the endless cycle of killing wolves for livestock depredations is stopped. Learn more about participating in one of these programs through a Wolf-Saving Gift.
How Your Adoption Helps Save Wolves
Supports our work to end the unscientific and unnecessary practice of aerial wolf killing in Alaska -- and prevent programs like it from spreading to the Greater Yellowstone region and other states. Enables Defenders to fight in court to keep vital federal protections for wolves in the Greater Yellowstone and Northern Rockies region. Helps underwrite our wolf-saving work with ranchers to keep livestock and wolf packs apart. Give a Wolf-Saving Gift to participate in one of these programs. Allows us to post rewards and help bring to justice people who illegally kill wolves.
Get out the checkbooks, girls!!!

"That's right, Shadow, ranchers are pussies."
https://secure.defenders.org/site/SPage ... d3.app220a" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Save Wolves from Senseless Slaughter!
Despite Recent Victory, Threats to Wolves Still Loom
In August 2010, Greater Yellowstone wolves won a key court victory when a federal judge restored their endangered status under the Endangered Species Act (ESA), but the the fight for their recovery is far from over. Our wolves are at continued fatal risk in places like Idaho, Montana and Wyoming as hostility toward wolves in the northern Rockies region continues to escalate - with possibly deadly consequences.
Meanwhile in Alaska, over 1,000 wolves have been slaughtered from the skies through the brutal practice of aerial hunting. With the Alaska Board of Game continuing to allow the unscientific and unnecessary practice of aerial wolf killing, this could be another bloody year for Alaska's wolves. Learn more about Gray Wolves and the threats they face >>
Once virtually eliminated from the lower 48 United States, wolves are clawing their way back from extinction since Defenders and others successfully fought for their re-introduction into Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho in 1995.
On August 5, 2010, a federal judge overturned a decision by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) to remove gray wolves from the Endangered Species Act (ESA), restoring their endangered status and paving the way for these critical predators to rebuild their numbers to ecologically sustainable levels. This ruling is the result of a lawsuit brought against the FWS in 2009 by Defenders of Wildlife and other conservation organizations.
While this court ruling is a great win for wolves, many challenges remain. There will undoubtedly be some people who oppose this decision. Defenders will continue to work hard in all our efforts mentioned above to ensure the wolves have a lasting future in the region. Defenders is committed to the long-term survival of the Northern Rockies wolves and other imperiled wildlife. We will continue to work in the field, in the courts and in Washington to ensure healthy, interconnected populations and ecosystems.
Meanwhile, Alaska continues its brutal program of allowing the aerial hunting of wolves. Through this barbaric practice, aerial gunners shoot wolves from aircraft, or chase them to exhaustion. Then they land and shoot the helpless wolves at point-blank range. Defenders is fighting this practice in Alaska and also working to pass the Protect America's Wildlife (PAW) Act in Congress which would nationally ban the unscientific and unnecessary practice of aerial hunting.
And in the Southwest, fewer than 60 wolves struggle to maintain a foothold in the wild as anti-wolf forces rally to eliminate their very existence. We're on the ground in Arizona and New Mexico, countering anti-wolf misinformation to ensure that these endangered wolves have a future in the Southwest.
But our work doesn't stop there. To help ease the financial burden of livestock losses attributed to wolves, we compensate ranchers.. We also implement efforts to reduce livestock/wolf conflicts, so that the endless cycle of killing wolves for livestock depredations is stopped. Learn more about participating in one of these programs through a Wolf-Saving Gift.
How Your Adoption Helps Save Wolves
Supports our work to end the unscientific and unnecessary practice of aerial wolf killing in Alaska -- and prevent programs like it from spreading to the Greater Yellowstone region and other states. Enables Defenders to fight in court to keep vital federal protections for wolves in the Greater Yellowstone and Northern Rockies region. Helps underwrite our wolf-saving work with ranchers to keep livestock and wolf packs apart. Give a Wolf-Saving Gift to participate in one of these programs. Allows us to post rewards and help bring to justice people who illegally kill wolves.
Get out the checkbooks, girls!!!

"That's right, Shadow, ranchers are pussies."
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Re: Idaho WOLF hunt is OPEN
I figured you would be taking the wolf down like you used to take down a charging runningback in the old days.Wedgebuster wrote:The 'buster is always packing.


