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wolveswolves:
“  ‘It’s tough sleeping at night’: ranchers seek to protect herds as wolves move in  January 9, 2019 - As wolves arrive in California for the first time since the 1920s, ranchers try non-lethal methods to deter animals once seen as...

wolveswolves:

‘It’s tough sleeping at night’: ranchers seek to protect herds as wolves move in

January 9, 2019 -  As wolves arrive in California for the first time since the 1920s, ranchers try non-lethal methods to deter animals once seen as livestock-killing vermin.

Breanna Owens had no idea where to turn for help when the wolves arrived. The northern California-based rancher used to take her cattle to graze each summer in Oregon, but in 2014, OR-7, a solitary wolf dubbed Journey, found a mate and produced a litter of pups in the vicinity of Owens’ herd. The Rogue pack was the first in the area in generations.

“All of a sudden it’s, ‘Oh, he set up camp. And there’s a female. And there’s pups – oh my gosh!’” she recalled.

Four years later, Owens again finds herself in wolf country. Another pack has settled in the northern California mountains where she and other ranchers graze sheep and cattle. It’s news that has environmentalists celebrating – wolves were extirpated from the state in the 1920s – and ranchers wringing their hands amid a handful of livestock killings.

But Owens is taking a remarkably contrarian tack: rather than calling for the removal of wolves, she’s working to ensure safe coexistence with the canines.

Gray wolves were long seen as livestock-killing vermin and were driven nearly to extinction by the early 1900s. They were listed as endangered in 1978, and in 1995 a reintroduction effort began in Yellowstone. Packs have since established themselves throughout the northern Rocky Mountains and in Washington and Oregon.

When the Rogue pack arrived, Owens had plenty of questions: did she need to be concerned? What actions could she take? When would the wolves start exhibiting hunting behavior?

Owens turned to an unlikely ally: Karin Vardaman, then a director with the California Wolf Center, a not-for-profit group dedicated to rebuilding the state’s long-lost wolf population. Vardaman knew conflicts over wolves were imminent, and that a working relationship with ranchers would both minimize cattle predation and the chance of wolves being killed in retaliation. Accordingly, she began meeting with livestock producers across the state’s northern reaches.

“People in urban areas get excited,” said Vardaman, now with the advocacy group Defenders of Wildlife. “But they’re not impacted when wolves return.”

She formed the Working Circle Proactive Stewardship, and Owens eventually signed on as its director. It suggests a suite of non-lethal wolf deterrents, including fladry (small red flags) and flashing lights, which can startle predators, and guard dogs. It teaches tactics such as bunching cattle together and rotating them around grazing areas, which not only keeps wolves at bay, it also better allows grass to regenerate. And it trains and funds range stewards, who spend time in the field with cattle, observing how best to manage the herd and protect it from predators.

The question could not be more pressing: the new California pack, the Lassen pack, now consists of at least two adults, two yearlings and five pups, and has killed at least four calves since July.

Todd Swickard suffered one such depredation. On 19 September, one of his ranch hands found a partially consumed calf, which state biologists confirmed was killed by a wolf. Swickard was in the process of shipping his cattle out of their summer grazing terrain, so there wasn’t much risk of further losses. But the specter of wolves’ continuing presence bothers him.

“They’re mostly nocturnal hunters, so it’s tough sleeping at night,” Swickard said. “You wonder if they’re in the middle of your livestock, and we’re charged with the husbandry and care of those animals.”

Area livestock producers feel their hands are tied if wolf numbers continue growing. Federal and state laws prohibit lethal recourse against wolves. Plus California lacks robust deer and elk populations such as those in Oregon and Idaho, so ranchers think their herds will be the top option on the wolves’ menu. “The wolves have to eat,” the rancher Daren Hagata said. “If they don’t have the wildlife populations … they’re going to come after your livestock.”

“Once [wolves] get in and start harassing the cows, especially on a regular basis, weight gains go away, conception rates go down,” said another rancher, Jack Hanson. “That’d be my biggest worry, even more than the mortality issue.”

With lethal action off the table – at least legally – ranchers are slowly coming to the realization they must try other methods. Owens spends a good deal of time meeting with ranchers in the area to educate them about Working Circle services.

Despite work that might be seen as advocacy for wolves, Owens is ambivalent about their presence. Her efforts are grounded as much as anything in the realization that wolves are not going anywhere.

“You like wolves, just like any other wildlife,” she said. “But when you see confirmation of pups, you get that sinking feeling. How’s this going to go? How many cows are we going to lose? How many wolves are we going to lose?”

For examples of the methods Owens preaches, ranchers in the Lassen pack’s orbit could look north. Since 2016, Scott Sumner has served as a Working Circle-funded range steward for the Hart Ranch, which his sister, Susan Hart, owns. Sumner patrols Hart’s summer grazing meadows by foot and mountain bike, accompanied by his nine-month-old collie, Rachel. Sumner’s job was an urgent addition – in 2015, the Shasta pack became the state’s first wolf pack in nearly a century, and the Hart Ranch was squarely in its range.

“My job is to know this landscape better than the cows and wolves,” Sumner said. “If I notice a change in the cows’ behavior, my radar goes up.” He keeps the cattle bunched tightly, rotates them between meadows, and is constantly seeking to minimize threats by, for example, thinning trees near salt licks to reduce odds of a wolf ambush. He checks a network of 14 trail cameras in the area, one of which snapped a photo this summer of OR-44, one of two lone wolves ranging through California.

Since Sumner began range riding, the Harts have suffered no wolf depredations, and the pack appears to have disappeared, though the state hasn’t confirmed whether the wolves dispersed on their own or were poached. No other pack has established itself. “Who knows?” Sumner said. “Maybe there are no wolves here because I’m around.”                     

Sumner understands the cattle he watches over would be at risk if wolves returned, but that doesn’t mean he’d be disappointed to see another pack. Shortly before the state confirmed the Shasta pack’s existence, a wolf trotted ahead of Sumner’s pickup, not 20 meters away, as he was driving near the ranch’s grazing meadows. “When I first saw it, it was pretty much just surprise – that’s a damn wolf! I was excited for 24 hours,” he said.

I asked Sumner how seeing the wolf made him feel, and it took him some time to elaborate. Earlier in the day, he had lamented how some wolf advocates glorified the species. But when describing his emotions when he saw the wolf three years ago, reverence crept into his tone.

“I don’t want to sound like a wolf-hugger,” he said, chuckling. “But they do symbolize a part of this country that I don’t want to see ever lost. I understand why they’re revered, and why they’re hated. I want to do what I can do, in what little time that I have, to help them be here.” 

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doronjosama:

Up now on my eBay! Various indie comics from 1987-1988! Grendel comics by Matt Wagner and the Pander Bros! Also up for grabs: my superheroine comic collection (70’s-80’s stuff), random Radio Comix books and various indie comics! My house is super small, and I am still selling off thirty years’ worth of collectibles to raise money for ongoing back taxes & various upcoming large expenses, so every little bit helps. Thanks for looking & sharing!

shubbabang:
“ I had a dream the other night that I could jump on clouds so this happened. I wanted to practice using different brushes too lol
Patreon
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shubbabang:

I had a dream the other night that I could jump on clouds so this happened. I wanted to practice using different brushes too lol

Patreon

grandegyptianmuseum:
“ Mummified Gazelle  A queen’s pet gazelle was readied for eternity with the same lavish care as a member of the royal family. In fine, blue-trimmed bandages and a custom-made wooden coffin, it accompanied its owner to the grave...

grandegyptianmuseum:

Mummified Gazelle

A queen’s pet gazelle was readied for eternity with the same lavish care as a member of the royal family. In fine, blue-trimmed bandages and a custom-made wooden coffin, it accompanied its owner to the grave in about 945 BC.
Egyptian Museum, Cairo. Photograph by Richard Barnes

wolveswolves:
“  Federal shutdown delays winter study, could stall efforts to bring new wolves to Isle Royale  January 7, 2019 - After sixty years, the winter study on Isle Royale has been put on hold because of the federal government shutdown.
For...

wolveswolves:

Federal shutdown delays winter study, could stall efforts to bring new wolves to Isle Royale    

January 7, 2019 - After sixty years, the winter study on Isle Royale has been put on hold because of the federal government shutdown. 

For the last sixty years, researchers at Michigan Tech have conducted a wolf and moose study on Isle Royale, monitoring the health of the ecosystem. Rolf Peterson is one of the study’s authors. He said this year the study has been put on hold. “Taken in concert with everything else going on it’s just one little piece of science. But it represents a tremendous loss of public and private resources. Just a total waste.”

Peterson says the winter study was especially important this year given the introduction of new wolves to the island. Park officials have brought four wolves to the island so far - the only male in that group died in November. 

Peterson said the park had hoped to bring more wolves to the island this winter.  “Wolves only mate once a year and that’s only in February so an entire year of potential reproduction could be lost if that effort doesn’t go ahead.”

Peterson said the Winter Study was supposed to be the first chance researchers would have to check on the wolves. He said if the shutdown lasts longer than 7 weeks, the study might not happen.

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coolcatgroup:
“This rotisserie chicken looks comfortable
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coolcatgroup:

This rotisserie chicken looks comfortable

mediamattersforamerica:

Before joining President Donald Trump’s administration, Robert W. Patterson made reprehensible statements about contraception, women in the workplace, LGBTQ people, and more. His bigotry has flown under the radar for too long.

tsunamiwavesurfing:

Scientists have spotted repeated blasts of radio signals coming from deep in space.

The breakthrough is only the second time scientists have seen such a repeating radio burst. It both deepens the mystery and offers a potential opportunity to finally understand what might be throwing out the burst from a galaxy billions of light years away.

Fast radio bursts have been speculated to be the result of everything from exploding stars to transmissions from aliens. But they have remained entirely mysterious, with little evidence at all of where they might be coming from.

The flashes only last for a milisecond but they are flung out with the same amount of energy the sun takes 12 months to produce.

Probably most exciting of the new bursts is one that scientists saw repeat six times, apparently from the same location. Of the more than 60 fast radio bursts detected so far, only one of them has ever repeated.

beastsoftheunknown:
“The Flatwoods Monster, also known as the Braxton County Monster or the Phantom of Flatwoods, is an alleged unidentified extraterrestrial or cryptid reported to have been sighted in the town off Flatwoods in Braxton, County West...

beastsoftheunknown:

The Flatwoods Monster, also known as the Braxton County Monster or the Phantom of Flatwoods, is an alleged unidentified extraterrestrial or cryptid reported to have been sighted in the town off Flatwoods in Braxton, County West Virginia on September 12, 1952. Stories of the creature are an example of a purported close encounter of the third kind.