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Wolf Attack

  • Thread starter Thread starter Anonymous
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Anonymous

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And this is what we paid Canucks how many taxpayer dollars for :roll: ...Looks like they have a few left in B.C. :

http://www.huntingbc.ca/forum/showthread.php?t=17807
 
Thanks for posting this OT. I've saved the link to share with some of those idiots who tell us that the stories of wolves attacking people are just folk lore and myths!!

My grandmother, the daughter of Germans from Russia, had a lot of stories her parents told her about wolf attacks on people in Russia back in the 1800's. Most of those folks were unarmed and had no way to fight off the vicious predators.

Yep, wolves are just nice, misunderstood doggies, not unlike those cute fuzzy felines that we have killing yearling heifers and stalking the neighbors here. I really wouldn't care if both wolves and mountain lions were totally eliminated! Personally, I can't see any need for either of the large predators, unless a zoo wants to cage a few for the greenies to look at.

Do you suppose there is any way we can get Canada to refund the money wasted on the wolves those idiots in USFW bought from them?
 
Yep- LB I wish I had recorded all the stories my grandmother used to tell of wolves--when as a teenager at the turn of the century, she was teaching school both in Wisconsin and later on the plains of Dakota--and that she had to pack a rifle everywhere she went because of the wolves that would follow her when she walked back and forth to school...
For some time she packed an old springfield 68 caliber Springfield muzzle loader (that her uncle had used in the civil war)- but since it was so heavy and you only had one shot- one of the first things she bought with her earnings was a little rolling block 22 Stevens...And she said that was great wolf medicine :wink: :lol: And I think every one of her 11 kids learned to shoot with that little Stevens---shot so much, the rifling is pretty well gone......
 
We had some pretty tenacious wolves not far from here this fall. Father and two sons had some snare lines out for them, one son (17) was out keeping watch one night and found himself sitting back against a tree with 8 wolves circling the tree. Only had 5 rounds in his rifle and no spares (yes bad planning), he killed 4 of the 8 and the other 4 were still circling him and he was wondering what to do with the last round. Called his brother on the walkie-talkie and he got there in time to help him shoot 3 more, still circling around the first brother, before the last one disappeared into the bush.
 
OT, you're only 3 generations from fighting in the Civil War? That's cool! And I hope you have those guns somewhere - too many family heirlooms fall to practiality.

You know the rhetorical question/accusation, What are you doing with all those guns anyway?
 
Brad S said:
OT, you're only 3 generations from fighting in the Civil War? That's cool! And I hope you have those guns somewhere - too many family heirlooms fall to practiality.

You know the rhetorical question/accusation, What are you doing with all those guns anyway?

Oh- we're hanging on to the musket...The Springfield probably lost a lot of its value because Grandma's dad cut about a foot of the barrel off to make it easier to carry ( Indianized it) when she was packing it...Also have a couple cans of powder and caps dating back to the turn of the century...The little Stevens got traded off many years ago when an uncle traded it for a revolver...Another uncle gave me a Jap 7.7 Arisaka with bayonet and officers sword he brought back in 45 from Japan...I kind of keep them all as a memory of those family members...
 

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