Return of the Wild
Examining both sides of the controversial policies to reintroduce wolves to Yellowstone and let forest fires burn.
Reintroducing wolves to Yellowstone is as controversial as
the park's policy of letting forest fires burn
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by Winifred Gallagher
The Chico Hot Springs Hotel is the social hub of Pray, Montana, which lies just outside
Yellowstone National Park. When I checked and mentioned to
the desk clerk that I had come to look in on the
controversial proposal to return the gray wolf to the park,
he remarked that a big gray had been run down recently on
an adjacent road. The concensus among the loungers in the
lobby seemed to be that the casualty wandered off from the
E.H. McCleery Foundation, a spacious private refuge for
some 80 wolves just over in Emigrant.
Like most Americans. I'd never had an unbarred glimpse of a
wolf. So I called Jack Lynch, the foundation's director, to
see if I could at least have a long-distance view of his
wild charges.
Within the first minutes on the phone with
Mrs. Lynch, who answered, I learned that if there's one
thing she and her husband hate, it's the Yellowstone wolf
recovery project, the plan to reintroduce wolves to the
parl. They know that some animals will stray from the
safety of the park and be slaughtered by a citizentry
conditioned to regard them as evil incarnate.
Next, the
Lynches hate journalists. "You people know nothing about
wolves!" Mrs. Lynch said. "You think they should be
preserved just so you can hear a wolf song!" I had to admit
I would like to, but asked if I could come by and see her
pack anyway. "We're working on our perimeter
fences—you don't even know what that means—and
we don't have time to waste," she said, her voice rising.
"My hands are dripping with blood! I have hungry wolves to
feed!" Then she hung up.
I retreated to the game-oriented ambience of the Chico bar.
There I learned that, unlike Mrs. Lynch, most of those
opposed to the Yellowstone recovery project are not
concerned about the wolves' welfare. As far as the
stockgrowers and biggame outfitters are concerned,
returning the top predator of the hoofed to a region famed
for sheep and cattle ranching and deer, elk and moose
hunting is nothing short of inviting economic disaster. A
rancher who runs cattle near Red Lodge, over by the park's
northeast corner, said he was too busy dealing with bears
to worry about wolves yet, "but if I had sheep—wolves
are hell on sheep—I'd go crazy over this Yellowstone
thing." Through the darkening saloon window, I made out a
bumper sticker: DID A WOLF GET YOUR DEER?
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