AliCat37
Michelle's Candied Corns!
Maybe some of you know, maybe some of you don't, corn snakes are my hobby. My true passion lies with our native large predators. I am going to school currently to be a zoologist, specifically so I can work with wolves and eventually hope to run my own wolf rescue and educational center.
Since the new movie "The Grey" is premiering this Friday, and undoubtedly some or many of you will see it, I simply wish to present some facts about wolves that are very, very misconstrued in the film, and about wolves in general.
Wolves do not attack people, they do not kill people. In fact, there are only two cases in the last 100 years that have been described as wolf attacks, and even those are suspicious.
Wolves fear people, and will do their best to keep far out of our paths.
Wolves don't live in packs- they live in families. There is a mom and a dad, and their kids.
They are not these "killing machines" that everyone makes them out to be. They can only kill elk that have a health problem- even the fastest wolf on his best day could not catch a healthy elk. Elk harvest numbers have not decreased.
Wolves do not "hamstring" their prey.
Lastly, four real wolves, wild wolves, were trapped and then killed during the making of the movie "The Grey".
If you enjoy reading, I urge you to go pick up a copy of the book "Never Cry Wolf" by Farley Mowat. It is an older, but still very relevant and comedic book about real wolves in the Alaskan wilderness.
If you want to see the "vicious" Alaskan wolves for real, check out this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHelxEEeSi8
To learn more about wolves, please visit http://wolfwatcher.org/
Since the new movie "The Grey" is premiering this Friday, and undoubtedly some or many of you will see it, I simply wish to present some facts about wolves that are very, very misconstrued in the film, and about wolves in general.
Wolves do not attack people, they do not kill people. In fact, there are only two cases in the last 100 years that have been described as wolf attacks, and even those are suspicious.
Wolves fear people, and will do their best to keep far out of our paths.
Wolves don't live in packs- they live in families. There is a mom and a dad, and their kids.
They are not these "killing machines" that everyone makes them out to be. They can only kill elk that have a health problem- even the fastest wolf on his best day could not catch a healthy elk. Elk harvest numbers have not decreased.
Wolves do not "hamstring" their prey.
Lastly, four real wolves, wild wolves, were trapped and then killed during the making of the movie "The Grey".
If you enjoy reading, I urge you to go pick up a copy of the book "Never Cry Wolf" by Farley Mowat. It is an older, but still very relevant and comedic book about real wolves in the Alaskan wilderness.
If you want to see the "vicious" Alaskan wolves for real, check out this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DHelxEEeSi8
To learn more about wolves, please visit http://wolfwatcher.org/