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Anonymous Coward User ID: 9520353 United States 07/02/2012 10:58 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to 25.media.tumblr.com] Even wild animals resisted the destruction of their homelands under the hooves of invading livestock. Many of the so-called “renegade” Gray Wolves, who undertook seemingly wanton attacks on cattle and sheep, were the last surviving members of their packs and had seen their fellow pack members trapped and killed. Arizona’s “Aguila Wolf” (“aguila” is Spanish for “eagle”) killed up to 65 sheep in one night. Near Meeker, Colorado, “Rags the Digger” would ruin trap lines by digging up traps without tripping them. Many of these avenging wolves were trap victims themselves, bearing names like “Crip”, “Two Toes”, “Three Toes”, “Peg Leg”, and “Old Lefty”. Whole communities would marshal their resources to kill the last of the wolves. “Three Toes of Harding County” eluded over 150 men in 13 years of attacking livestock in South Dakota. As recently as 1920, a trapper worked for eight months to kill the famous “Custer Wolf”. East of Trinidad, Colorado, ran a renegade wolf called “Old Three Toes”, the last of 32 wolves killed in Butler Pasture. This lonely wolf befriended a rancher’s collie, who was penned into a chicken run to keep him away from the wolf. One night they found freedom together by digging from opposite sides of the fence. The collie never returned home, and was killed weeks later by a poison bait. Old Three Toes and her litter of Gray Wolf-collie whelps were discovered shortly thereafter and all were killed. -Ecodefense: A Field Guide to Monkeywrenching [shown is an actual photograph of Old Three Toes, with handwritten information regarding the wolf’s notoriety] |
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Muzzle (OP) User ID: 18884169 United States 07/03/2012 11:20 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | [link to 25.media.tumblr.com] Quoting: Anonymous Coward 9520353 Even wild animals resisted the destruction of their homelands under the hooves of invading livestock. Many of the so-called “renegade” Gray Wolves, who undertook seemingly wanton attacks on cattle and sheep, were the last surviving members of their packs and had seen their fellow pack members trapped and killed. Arizona’s “Aguila Wolf” (“aguila” is Spanish for “eagle”) killed up to 65 sheep in one night. Near Meeker, Colorado, “Rags the Digger” would ruin trap lines by digging up traps without tripping them. Many of these avenging wolves were trap victims themselves, bearing names like “Crip”, “Two Toes”, “Three Toes”, “Peg Leg”, and “Old Lefty”. Whole communities would marshal their resources to kill the last of the wolves. “Three Toes of Harding County” eluded over 150 men in 13 years of attacking livestock in South Dakota. As recently as 1920, a trapper worked for eight months to kill the famous “Custer Wolf”. East of Trinidad, Colorado, ran a renegade wolf called “Old Three Toes”, the last of 32 wolves killed in Butler Pasture. This lonely wolf befriended a rancher’s collie, who was penned into a chicken run to keep him away from the wolf. One night they found freedom together by digging from opposite sides of the fence. The collie never returned home, and was killed weeks later by a poison bait. Old Three Toes and her litter of Gray Wolf-collie whelps were discovered shortly thereafter and all were killed. -Ecodefense: A Field Guide to Monkeywrenching [shown is an actual photograph of Old Three Toes, with handwritten information regarding the wolf’s notoriety] When my father was a boy in 1913 Nebraska, a Wolver came through to catch one of those "lone wolves". He succeeded. Fiftytwo years later, gov't trappers trapped the last of the Red Wolves on our farm in NW Arkansas. In his book, "Between Two Ages," Brzezinski wrote: "The technetronic era involves the gradual appearance of a more controlled society. Such a society would be dominated by an elite, unrestrained by traditional values." MuzzleBreak |
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