Yes Capper, we have a thriving population. Last year, the first open hunting season was allowed on them on a quota basis. I know a few ol boys here that killed one. The season has now been shut down and they are back on the endangered list. I get to see them every once in a while, but for the most part, they are very elusive. However, I hear them howling on a regular basis.
They cause quite the controversy in these parts.
Most of the people around here do not know all that much about them and base their arguments on whatever the current story floating around the coffee shops and bars happens to be.
There has been several hounds in this country killed by them. I personaly know two of the men who lost dogs. I got rid of my hounds a couple of years ago and was lucky to have not lost a dog. In the North Fork River drainage, it is one hell of a gamble to turn your dogs loose on a track. They are thickest in that region.
It is a fact that our elk populations are down, and the wolf is part of the reason, BUT not the only reason. There are other environmental factors at play that are too complex to try and address in this post. From what I have seen, I am of the opinion that our elk are slowly adapting to the wolf and learning how to survive among them. More sound management decisions need to be implemented at this point, instead of just trying to sell tags.
The last two years that I guided, I had wolves around me on a daily basis. They would often come around the area where I had tied off the clients and my mule prior to heading off into a canyon to hunt. I heard them howling most every morning in the dark while riding out from camp to the area that I was going to hunt for the day. The howling spooked the hell out of most of the clients and they would not get very far from my hind pockets
The good thing was that they did add an extra element to the overall experience for the clients. On the downside, the wolves did make it hard as hell to hunt, as the elk stayed kegged up in the thickets and were seldom seen in any opening.
Many outfitters in the Clearwater region are now struggling because of the declining population. It is sort of a catch 22. People want elk around so they can kill them. Outfitters want elk so they can make money. Wolves just do what wolves do, they kill elk to survive, but they have the Federal Government backing them. It starts to get complicated at this point.
I will add this personal note and it is strictly my own opinion. I do not mind the wolf being here, I just don't want them treated like some glorified mystic animal. A Mt.Lion is just as good and efficient preditor as the wolf, yet they get no special treatment. We can harvest them freely in Idaho. Make it so with the wolf.
As it now stands, however, I have chosen not to harvest any more elk. The last bull that I shot was in 2006. If I am out killing elk from a diminishing population, then I am also part of the problem. That is a personal choice that I do not impose on others. Simply put, I do not want to kill elk, I want to hunt them, and only if it is an ecologically sound practice. I can at this point, however, hunt the Idaho wolf in good conscience. Yet the law says NO!
As a final note, I hope our wolf problem does not migrate your way. It has not been a pretty scene for Idaho and it will also tough for CO. For now, I'm just glad that I am not an elk, or a wolf
BTW, if they do become established in your state, you will not have any problem in identifying their tracks, because they will be everywhere and they are rather distinct from a lion.
Take care my friend