Unless my math is bad. Why not just put a bounty on them again.
https://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/...survey-7858135
Unless my math is bad. Why not just put a bounty on them again.
https://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/...survey-7858135
Last edited by MRP; 11-22-2023 at 07:16 PM.
No one on their death bed ever said; I should have spent more time at work.
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They can always find someone willing to put the ethical spin of protecting wolves by calling them "Fur Bearing Animals".
Last I recall, Moose, Elk, Deer and Caribou are also fur bearing animals.
How do wolves take precedence over dwindling populations of ungulates?
https://oceola.ca/
http://bcwf.net/index.php
http://www.wildsheepsociety.net/
I Give my Heart to my Family....
My Mind to my Work.......
But My Soul Belongs to the Mountains.....
If anyone wants to shoot some wolves I've seen lots of tracks in the brassey creek area.
I interpret that their point isn’t that wolves should take precedence over dwindling ungulate populations, rather, their point is that a wolf cull is a band-aid solution/scapegoat for the bigger issue, which is resource extraction and its impact on habitat.
I think it’s entirely reasonable to expect that our government finds an all encompassing solution, rather than just treating the symptoms… one part of which should be wolf culling.
If it cant be done with one shot, it shouldn't be done.
"grab large claw hammer - put against butt cheek , pry head out of ass with claws...then go back to school..."
More wolf sign up the moose lake road. Go get'em fellas. Right at the end about km 26.
They need a bounty at a level that a semi-decent Trapper could make a living taking them out. $1000-$2000 per animal. If a trapper could go out and kill 10 a month and take home a 150k a year it would be worth it.
Member of the CCFR, but not a "Violent Extremist"
Got that right^^^^.
No one on their death bed ever said; I should have spent more time at work.