A nonprofit organization dedicated to raising broad public awareness of the truth about wolves, their social nature, and their importance to healthy ecosystems.
We are excited to announce the opening of the Living with Wolves Museum in Ketchum ID, where wolf behavior & biology come to life through images of the Sawtooth Pack. The museum is now open and our hours of operation are Tuesday - Saturday, 11am-4pm.
https://t.co/ocOJSyJER5
Living with Wolves has made the decision to transition away from X (formerly known as Twitter). You can find us on Facebook and Instagram. Please follow us on our NEW BlueSky account https://t.co/ZfpGuyxk0F
Colorado Parks and Wildlife released 15 gray wolves from British Columbia, and five of the Copper Creek pack wolves initially released in 2023, in Pitkin and Eagle counties on Jan. 12, 15 and 18.
https://t.co/ojR3zyYzTO
Wolves don’t “breed like rabbits” as so many anti-wolf critics often claim. They have puppies just once per year in the spring. This is a well-known and verifiable fact.
As we step into 2025, let’s carry hope and determination for the future of wolves — a keystone species vital to the health of our ecosystems. While their resilience is inspiring, their survival depends on our actions now more than ever.
https://t.co/5uVXw9m8YQ
Wolves deserve to be safe, wild and free, and we welcome you to share in our passion for wolves by making a contribution to help secure their future on this #GivingTuesday. Join our pack!
Visit our website to learn more about what your gift will support.
https://t.co/PYHft2mMyX
Have you seen the new wolf museum in Ketchum, Idado from our partners @LWWolves?! This stunning space immerses visitors in the world of wolves with photography from Jim & Jamie Dutcher, clips from their Emmy award winning docuseries, & more! Check it out! https://t.co/1w2r8xg6Ha
The Idaho Fish and Game Commission has approved a “wolf management plan” that will slash the state’s wolf population by nearly two-thirds over the next several years.
https://t.co/Fid7wsEu7X
Carter Niemeyer, a @LWWolves advisory board member, examined photos of dead cows obtained by the @HumaneSociety in an open records request & has concluded that wolves are not to blame for the deaths of cattle whose bodies were found near Meeker, Colorado.
https://t.co/N4CiYytTWp
What happens to the pack when a wolf dies? When people kill wolves, packs become less stable and can cease to exist. Read the groundbreaking research by Kira Cassidy et al. in the February issue of Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.
https://t.co/oDn79AlEwg
Colorado Parks and Wildlife has released its initial wolf recovery plan. The commission will take public comments on the preliminary plan in January and February, with a vote on the final plan in early May. https://t.co/OuRWESF4zc
This #GivingTuesday, consider supporting @LWWolves. Your contribution will go to work to monitor and share with you the most current policy decisions affecting wolves worldwide, expand our educational programs, and support critical scientific research.
https://t.co/PYHft2nkov
Through countless mediums, Doug has been instrumental in turning around the public image of this often maligned species and top level carnivore. Thank you, Doug, for a spectacular career so far. We look forward to seeing where life takes you next.
https://t.co/LBsXMMNUBC
Last month, Colorado Parks and Wildlife started investigating the possibility that wolves were responsible for killing cattle in NW Colorado. No investigative efforts turned up any evidence of wolves in the area.
https://t.co/jqJZuWEU5O
A Montana judge has temporarily restricted wolf hunting and trapping near Yellowstone and Glacier national parks and imposed tighter statewide limits on killing the essential predators.
https://t.co/E1yYGUhEJL
The lawsuit alleges that the state legislature has adopted aggressive wolf management rules based on faulty science and asks Judge Michael McMahon to suspend the hunting rules and update a 2002 management plan that hasn’t been modified since.
https://t.co/8RGVof3y2L
Wolves are not only essential to ecosystems, they boost local economies. A new study shows that, in the three bordering states of Yellowstone National Park, annual spending by people coming to see wolves has increased from $35.5 million in 2005 to $82.7 million in 2021.
In a new statewide survey of 1,500 likely Colorado voters, nearly two-thirds said they believed that Colorado’s gray wolves should not be trophy hunted or trapped.This included majorities across all political affiliations and geographic areas.”
https://t.co/sRSD3rDGMX