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Gray Wolf Field Trip -- Part 2
Go To Part 1
Friday May 16th, 2003
BWCC's May 16, 2003 Wolf Outing was the inspiration for two excellent
articles on wolves in the Idaho Mountain Express.
READ
ARTICLE 1...->
READ ARTICLE 2...->
PHOTO SLIDESHOW 2
There are 6 photos in the slideshow at right.
Download times vary from 2-3 seconds for high-speed connections, and
2-3 minutes for dial-up. Enjoy the whole show (which will load and
play automatically) OR use the quick links at right to view and
print individual slides (just use the BACK button on your web
browser to return to this page when you are done with each slide). |

LOOK AT:
Photo Slideshow 1
*Slide 1:
Lower Squaw Creek
*Slide 2:
Seeing Wolf Tracks
*Slide 3:
Wolf Track
*Slide 4:
Telemetry Listening
*Slide 5:
Wolf Advocates Afield
*Slide 6:
Visiting May Family B&B
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About the Photo Slideshow
______________________
There are 6 photos
in the slideshow above. Download times vary from 2-3 seconds for
high-speed connections, and 2-3 minutes for dial-up. Enjoy the whole
show (which will load and play automatically) OR use the
quick links above to view and print individual slides (just use
the BACK button on your web browser to return to this page when you
are done with each slide).
All photos are by
Lynne K. Stone, BWCC,
Copyright 2008, unless otherwise noted. |
Squaw Creek - Buffalo Ridge Wolf Pack
On May 16th, 22 people gathered to learn from Idaho wolf experts Carter
Niemeyer and Curt Mack. After a stop in the Sawtooth Valley and a
discussion on wolf ecology at the Stanley Museum lawn, we continued to
Squaw Creek, a tributary to the Salmon River. The Buffalo Ridge Pack
raised six pups last year in 2002, all which survived until late May,
when one was found killed -- its death is under investigation. At Squaw
Creek we saw hundreds of wolf prints in the drained Thompson Creek
Mine's steelhead rearing pond. The mud provided an excellent opportunity
to photograph the large paw tracks. The Buffalo Ridge wolves have been
dining on steelhead and the large numbers of deer and elk that winter in
the Salmon River canyon. Some of our group stopped to tour the nearby
May Family Bed and Breakfast where wolves can sometimes be viewed in
nearby fields from the front porch.
For more information,
email us.
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