I had wolves, coyotes, bears, mountain lions, deer, and elk coming down to my yard from the mountains behind my house in British Columbia. We had a six foot wildlife fence around the back yard where we had about 3,000 square feet of garden and nothing bothered us other than the gophers and an occasional pack rat. Had a young deer try to jump the fence and break its neck once when it was being chased down by wolves or something but that was it. The wolves didn’t actually want anything to do with humans but a cougar killed a neighbour’s dog once. It was a good life. Now I live in the city and it’s all drug crazed idiots killing people. I was safer with the wolves, bears, and cougars.
@jacktheplaygod7 күн бұрын
Most Dangerous Animal " Humans "
@scottsevers61947 күн бұрын
I'm an Aussie Remote Area fireman. My first tour fighting fires in British Columbia, I woke up to go for a early morning jog. There was a black bear 🐻 in our camp, I went back to my tent 😂😂😂😂
@loantran-thanh77957 күн бұрын
Are you thinking of going back there one day?
@scottsevers61947 күн бұрын
@@loantran-thanh7795 yes, I did 8 tours in America and 6 in Canada
@michaelmichaelagnew85037 күн бұрын
@@scottsevers6194 Dang you make it sound like our world here in North America is a war zone.
@sylviecoutelle7 күн бұрын
In 1997 the wolves were known to have progressed from the south of Italy to the italian Alps west of Turin. I live in Marseille France, and then we were not really aware of the possible presence of wolves in the Alps. I was a hiker, went on 10-day solitary trecks with a backpack and found myself one late evening wrigling myself into my sleeping-bag on the steep mountain side when, turning around I saw two animals conversing in surprised throaty low tones. Their attitude was confident, not over interested, just surprised to find their trail squatted. I knew they couldn't be dogs, if you have met with dogs in such circumstances you know . I was much too tired, having repeatedly lost the trail since before break of day, to feel any fear. I just said out loud: good night wolves, pulled shut the sleeping-bag strings and immediately went to sleep. Later that summer I asked a Park guard on another summit if there were any wolves in that part of the Alps, and he answered : yes, in Gran Parco di Salbertrand. Where I had seen them. I cherish that memory, of a peacefuly shared world.
@BT-fg1is6 күн бұрын
Cool.
@andmos10016 күн бұрын
Most likely conversation of the wolfs in question: «Hey do you think the human is asleep?» «Well he did say goodnigh to us, so no not yet»
@johnganshow55366 күн бұрын
@@andmos1001 And, I wonder what he tastes like...
@Xianne0276 күн бұрын
Beautiful story! And everything went well ❤ But with my personal experience with wolves though, it's a wonder that they didn't at least come and sniff at you and finally urinate on your sleeping bag 😂
@sylviecoutelle6 күн бұрын
@Xianne027 They didn't urinate, I would have noticed 🤪🤣. But if they came to snif at me, which seemed probable, I was already asleep 🤣 It was a strange time in my life, I was a strict vegan, and carrying everything on my back for 9 days, except a miniature gaz cooker ( which I always took along later in such higher quotes ) I noticed animals were not afraid of me at all. A few days after the wolves I spent 2 nights in a little chapel on a rocky shoulder about quote 1700m, no vegetation to speak of, but enough for (... bouquetins... the english name I have forgotten,) which grazed every morning fearlessly around me. The last morning, as I was leaving the mountain I decided to share my remaining homemade cereal biscuits ( only whole grain cereal flakes...) and the male came repeatedly half a meter from my extended hand. Perhaps if I had been sitting down he'd have taken the biscuit from my hand. He did like the offering, but the females would not dare eat , just because it was the male's priviledge. The They were even less afraid of me than he was. The same guardia parco I met in that very chapel a month later was very surprised : they had not seen bouquetins in those parts, and beside, they kept far from humans 😯 😁👍🌟😇
@theempath82445 күн бұрын
I am pleased that people now love wolves for what they can achieve by being a predator. Wolves were always meant to be in an ecosystem, all animals, insects, plants and water are essential for thriving ecosystem. Thank you for this video, I do remember the time when the wolves were reintroduced, and I was really happy then as wolves are my favourite wild animal.
@Dudotskiiiiii3 күн бұрын
Not everything. Some species such as certain mosquitos have been proven to have no effect on the environment and only bring harm.
@Goldenfish-o5p2 күн бұрын
Mosquitoes are pollinators, im still amazed you didnt mention flies somehow.. but I guess its bc mosqutoes technically suk the most for humans, get it? Sry it was dark.. @@Dudotskiiiiii
@wildfire92802 күн бұрын
@@Dudotskiiiiii Wasn’t there a disease made for them or something?
@ell0hh2 күн бұрын
@@Dudotskiiiiiii hate mosquitoes, but they are food for other insects and animals
@gerardchapman83846 күн бұрын
Thank you, really appreciate this,I'm 67 and still learning.
@Elklife719-x5k6 күн бұрын
Yet we are contracted paid and congratulated by Wyoming department of wildlife for hunting wolves undiscriminatly!
@christinawarrington31926 күн бұрын
@@Elklife719-x5ksadly not all of the talk of wolves is honest & true. All comes down to how they might make $$ off them. God created all animals with a good purpose to contribute to their ecosystem. If we looked at this honesty, we would be so better off. Sadly the almighty $$ controls too many people..
@neemekolan20215 күн бұрын
my home country is basically 1/200 of USA and we have over 200 wolves, thought some farmers complain ecological experts say we need to increase it atlest 270 to balance the ecosystem. We also have over 800 black bears and over 1000 lynx, and also they numbers are not enough. It realy seems weird that USA that is so big actually have so little wolves on one corner of country, but rest of country is expty. Ecosystem needs wolves they keep local populations strong and healty. They might be nuisance to farmers but famrmers can defend they property without killing wolves.
@importantsomeone1535 күн бұрын
@@Elklife719-x5k bettor then funding terrorism united used to be great country but by supporting terrorism u have shown ur true face to the world
@axhed5 күн бұрын
well amigo... this vid is an AI-enhanced rehash of a video that was going around almost 20 years ago. much of the conclusions about beavers and berries are leaving out a great deal of other conservation efforts and the wolves' impact is way overblown, although it does make for a beautiful story.
@kathym66036 күн бұрын
I can't imagine how all the data was collected to make this video. Thank you for the peaceful and logical viewpoint . . . without force and fear.
@ILoveTinfoilHats6 күн бұрын
Wikipedia
@rosiesimpp5 күн бұрын
it’s literally AI
@gaz88915 күн бұрын
Most of this was covered in earlier documentary films, so I don't think they collected much data themselves.
@hoppas774 күн бұрын
@@rosiesimpp so it might not even be true lol
@incaseofamnesia63804 күн бұрын
@@hoppas77 It's not true. This information is old and debunked.
@maddogbrisbane012 күн бұрын
great little mini documentary - old aussie bloke here and know very little about your animals, truly amazing what this handful of wolves have contributed to
@DiNY-u9k9 күн бұрын
So very interesting. My father was a wildlife biologist who worked for the New York State DEC. He managed deer, geese and other animals. He also developed wetlands and preserved State lands. With all that I learned about this I was never aware of the dramatic effect that one species could have on an entire ecosystem. Thank you. Subscribed.
@spikenomoon7 күн бұрын
Wildlife manages itself much better than humans calling themselves experts. Make no mistake I’m not insulting biologists or very educated people. It’s the Human arrogance. We believe we know better than God. Just like climate change. They claim the earth is four billion years old. And they can take of few measurements for a decade and records a few centuries old. Claiming we are destroying the planet.
@nccrchurchunusual7 күн бұрын
Thx for the video. Boa's & Anaconda are wrecking havoc in south Florida- ppl let them go when they tire of them as pets- they are eating everything incuding aligators. They dont belong there.
@elizabethhennessey64377 күн бұрын
Ecosystems always need alpha predators to keep the balance.
@tonymoretti23477 күн бұрын
He killed Pnut and Fred!!
@benjamindouglas8627 күн бұрын
My grandfather was a rancher, wolves were his mortal enemy and he killed dozens and dozens of them.
@DAIBLA817 күн бұрын
Every creature in an ecosystem is needed and has specific roles, let's never forget that ❤
@srwla25017 күн бұрын
Yes. I was thinking about this five minutes back. Because we had a small rat situation today. Never had rats ever. But, we had cats and dogs in the house. Now that we don't - rats are returning. Pretty sure we can coerce quietly some neighboring stray cat to move in a bit closer to scare the rats off.
@reysolo36727 күн бұрын
mosquito experts would disagree xD. I would go further that even if they don't have role towards humans, don't eradicate them.
@sandybeach63997 күн бұрын
Yes and Amen!
@KeithGreenan-e7d6 күн бұрын
Except Humans
@scottdixon60336 күн бұрын
Some would disagree Democrats might be on that short list
@ms22401gal6 күн бұрын
Fantastic presentation. Years ago, I watched a wonderful nature show on beaver, described as the keystone species for their impact generating a new, thriving ecosystem. This wolf presentation is equally splendid. Impressive that because of 14 wolves released in 1995, the beavers thrive today. Well done, content creators. 👏
@MarilynOPossum4 күн бұрын
I’m so happy to hear this. Humans can do things that are wonderful when they try.
@chrisgarrison11583 күн бұрын
Huntsville Alabama. They released alligators to control the beavers.
@chrissmall6359 күн бұрын
This is classic, for ever action there is a reaction. We must be so careful what we do in the world!
@isay2077 күн бұрын
Ranchers may not like this
@loannemarriott24137 күн бұрын
@@isay207Ranchers just need to get 3 big farm dogs. I respect farmers and ranchers but not at the expense of a whole ecosystem.
@4Xscalper7 күн бұрын
Yep. The oceans are telling us that now.
@DiNY-u9k7 күн бұрын
So long as knowledgeable wildlife biologists carefully introduce the proper species, nature is kept in balance. It is when people without proper knowledge release invasive species into an area that there are problems. This is also true with plants.
@kylegreenwood4696 күн бұрын
Yes because we've always had great success when we intervene with nature
@James-ix2jz9 күн бұрын
I often wonder what it would have been like before they wiped out the buffallo..their were millions and millions of them...
@gentleeventful8 күн бұрын
@@James-ix2jz it helped kill off the Indians because it took away their food supply so they were just killing Indians as well
@JamesJones-cx5pk8 күн бұрын
They have restored some buffalo.
@danielrota74918 күн бұрын
@@JamesJones-cx5pk canada has restored prairie buffalo in grassland National parc in southern saskatchewan north of Montana. I visited the parc and spend a fair amount of time with the parc biologits. Unlike the small wood buffalo I have seen in the North west territories are very big. Apparently they are thriving the herd increasing very fast. As the parc is quite small it is almost used as a breeding ground. Roughly 200 have been sent to various parcs And yellowstone parc received several of them
@judylloyd79018 күн бұрын
@@danielrota7491 ...park*...😊😊😊
@paulbriggs30728 күн бұрын
Today there probably about a million bison in the U,S and Canada. Want more? Raise them for food. That's why they are as numerous as they are. McDonalds and Burger King should have Bison Burgers. But young people would scream that we are wiping them out.
@michaelbooker27334 күн бұрын
I knew most of this, but I want to thank you. The roughly 68% of the population, definitely not capable of critical thinking(you know the didn't actually accumulate science knowledge from school), needed this. Seriously THANK YOU
@gmabailey404 күн бұрын
Your kidding right? You introduce an invasive species with no known predators and they wipe out every other animal. Its not gonna happen right away but over time. Especially as the population grows and more wolves get hungry and more daring.
@trapbois45734 күн бұрын
You do realize humans can't know everything? Even scientists and researchers don't know everything. If we did absorb 100% information presented to us, humans would lose their minds.
@Kalatakieta3 күн бұрын
same haha, I knew this too but damn it's great to be reminded again.
@e.woodwitch29258 күн бұрын
I remember when they released these wolves in the park. It's nice to find out how successful this turned out to be. Thank You for this fascinating documentry.
@HolladayEndAtBohicaGarden7 күн бұрын
Yeah, I was going to say the same thing. It was a big deal, saying it was controversial and had pushback is a HUGE understatement. There were protests, people were fighting on both sides.
@jaredleicht16566 күн бұрын
They could have just opened the park up to hunting and made lots of money selling permits. Then, an elk would be killed with a bullet and would die immediately. Instead, they get torn apart and eaten alive.
@Cherrypi3936 күн бұрын
@@jaredleicht1656or maybe they could what they did which was super successful
@jamesleonard47135 күн бұрын
@@jaredleicht1656 Yep. And I love how Beavers building a dam is great for the environment, but when humans do it, its horrific. Doesn't matter if it controls flooding, provides drinking water, stabilizes the river flow and generates clean power.
@tosca72164 күн бұрын
@@HolladayEndAtBohicaGarden And several of the Canadian wolves were shot by ranchers.
@edl65310 күн бұрын
The Beaver discussion is so true. Most folks don't have a clue how important they are. - Nice doggies.
@martinwinther60139 күн бұрын
and vids showing people destroying beaverdams gets 100s and 1000s of likes. Its truly heartbreaking. - Idc about your flooded road or ½ an acre of drowned crops. - drive around, and remind yourself that even the bible say you shouldnt cut your field all the way to the edge.ie its our duty to live in harmony with nature
@okaycola29 күн бұрын
🦫 🔋
@googleisshit32208 күн бұрын
@martinwinther6013 ..you loss most of us at bible...time to grow up
@robertpatterson34068 күн бұрын
@@googleisshit3220speak for yourself clown,maybe you should grow up and think about how everything got here in the first place !
@rooster62718 күн бұрын
The bible lol that fairytale?
@davechristensen22053 күн бұрын
I studied this in college in 2011. The stats we just starting to come in. It's like "the rest of the story," to see this video. It's good to have these studies that challenge "human intelligence, " and spark solutions to ignorance.
@justme-dm7sb7 күн бұрын
I like wolves. I had one once. He was so sweet. He was born and raised in captivity so he would have never made it in the wild. Also he was fixed. He kept the coyotes away and he loved cats. In fact the cats belonged to him and he had no problem letting everyone and everything know they were his cats. What I learned from him is wolves are shy. They don't actually like to be seen by humans. As much as he might like to stretch around the livingroom when it was only us, when someone else came around they might catch a glimpse of him from around a corner. I loved him so much.
@The_end_is_near-c8j7 күн бұрын
@@justme-dm7sb Probably a wolf-dog mix. But still a gorgeous animal I'm sure. A wolf, pure breed even in captivity, would never accept a cat as a companion animal. Cats become prey to them at 8 months of age.
@jimruthem65877 күн бұрын
We. Had one for 14 years. Heeled on a slack leash. Such a sweet boy. 180 lbs.
@jimruthem65877 күн бұрын
Not a mix
@Athena-le7rm7 күн бұрын
Not smart to mix wolves with domestic dogs. It ruins their instinct and natural family loving nature.
@justme-dm7sb7 күн бұрын
@@The_end_is_near-c8j 7/8. He was quite wolfie. I don't know why he was so friendly to the cats, but he was. He hated coyotes and loved to chase elk. He chased a herd through 3 of my pasture fences one day and I spent 3 days fixing them. But he loved those cats. They slept on him and the kittens slept in his food dish in a pile right in front of him. One of those odd friendships in nature that doesn't seem likely and happened anyway.
@hariseldon37867 күн бұрын
Wolf to Ranger - "Elk problem? Hold my beer..."
@MsTygame7 күн бұрын
Not everyone gets our humor. 😢
@Read-YAHs-WORD7 күн бұрын
@@MsTygameI think he is saying wolves wipe out elk populations. Not sure? Anyhoo they do where i live in the rockies. It is super sad to see elk herds huddled up making distressed sounds because the wolves are having their way with them and their young....I love all of Yahs creations but it is hard on both sides.
@hariseldon37867 күн бұрын
@@MsTygame Yes - many people think that wolves prefer chardonnay...
@elainebradley82137 күн бұрын
@Read-YAHs-WORD he's not against wolves but overpopulation of elk. The coyotes are a problem too and wolves keep them in check. A rancher in northern Saskatchewan protected his livestock with a careful selection of guard dogs wearing spiked collars. He developed a second business providing guard dogs to others.
@Deontjie7 күн бұрын
I wonder how many Chinese tourists tried to take a selfie with a wolf.
@wrenblythee86782 күн бұрын
Wolves will always be my favorite animals, So many environments rely on them ❤
@cheesewire0077 күн бұрын
The most important thing to learn is to keep politicians and corporate interests out of our ecosystems and allow nature to care for us, not us for nature.
@susettemclachlan87657 күн бұрын
We wondered 20 years ago what disasters the geo engineering ( ie Chem trails) project would cause and today we are seeing and experiencing the devastating results of this massive climate manipulation programme
@quidproquo39336 күн бұрын
Ya good luck with that
@williamhodgden89706 күн бұрын
Keep activists out of the ecosystem as well.
@christinawarrington31926 күн бұрын
@@quidproquo3933if all people gave a Damon& worked together HONESTLY, it would work. Not like climate change nuts gluing themselves to roads or splashing paint on treasured artifacts. There are true facts that are known or can’t be learned. The biggest obstacle is lack of honesty & people who care more about $$$. Money is indeed the root of all evil
@brentbeacham96915 күн бұрын
I just heard hunters and farmers were against it. Government corrected the mistake.
@ganymeade51518 күн бұрын
Wolf 21M was awesome.
@LightBachem3 күн бұрын
His grandkids are out there lol
@naturalunnatural2 күн бұрын
RIP The Gentleman
@KashanJabari2 күн бұрын
He had a human soul I bet
@marquisethomas5611Күн бұрын
Im so glad there are different scientists & engineers doing things in the background to keep society running smoothly. I knew wouldve thought wolves could have such an impact
@LaundrymatCat10 күн бұрын
Wow that wolf that stopped eating after his mate died was one loyal loving being. 💪🏽💔
@patmanchester80459 күн бұрын
This is not uncommon.
@Vernbubba8 күн бұрын
He stopped eating cause the food runs out
@vbickford8 күн бұрын
And terribly sad.
@cynthiagonzalez6588 күн бұрын
Wolves are faithfully monogamous They also take care of their aged parents.
@cynthiagonzalez6588 күн бұрын
@@Vernbubba Your brain is astonishingly limited.
@DD23-17 күн бұрын
Animals truly know how to be in sync with Nature and actually form and protect nature itself! Amazing!
@gypsyrain3696 күн бұрын
Exactly , It IS Humans With THE PROBLEM . Look How They Are Trying To Get Rid Of US .
@EvenTheDogAgrees6 күн бұрын
No, they don't. The reason things work out in nature (most of the time) is because almost everything is a negative feedback loop. If there are many rabbits, the foxes will have plenty of food, so they'll have more young survive into adulthood as a result. Which now start decimating the rabbit population, until there are so few rabbits left that the foxes have difficulty finding food, and start to starve. With the fox population now in decline, the rabbits have fewer natural enemies, and their numbers grow, taking us right back to the start to do this all over again. At no point does the fox think "how can I best balance this ecosystem?" or "with all the rabbits hunted to near extinction, I should really change diet and have fewer kids so that this ecosystem can restore itself". The fox is only concerned with feeding itself and surviving, not with nature or the ecosystem it's a part of. If the fox had its way, if it had a means to locate and hunt each and every last rabbit, it would hunt them to absolute extinction, thereby sealing its own fate. The fact that this doesn't happen is not because the fox is wise and "in tune with nature"; it's because it is incapable of surviving under the conditions it has created for itself. The only animal capable of doing that is, not surprisingly, the only animal capable of abstract though: the human. It is that human that released those wolves to deal with the elk problem. It's that human that manages wild preserves, that selectively hunts certain species to ensure the ecosystem stays in balance. That's why it's forbidden to hunt certain species, or to hunt during certain seasons (e.g. breeding season), because we actively try to preserve what's there. A predator in the wild, on the other hand, couldn't care less if a species is endangered, or what impact its killing of another species' offspring will have long-term. Nature is not a magical fairy tale land; it's a complex system that mostly manages itself, by constantly "fucking around and finding out", so to speak. Abundance, leading to overconsumption, leading to diminished supply, leading to famine. But sometimes this can go very, very wrong. Like when we had this great idea of introducing non-native species into Australia when we settled there, leading to ecological damage, extinction of several native species, and creating a problem we still haven't been able to fully fix. Look up the situation with rabbits and cats in Australia for some good examples. This is what happens when nature meets other nature it didn't co-evolve with: devastation.
@generfeld4 күн бұрын
@@EvenTheDogAgrees exactly. nature is not a disney movie
@MadDestructionChaos2 күн бұрын
This was sooooooo freaking cool to watch!! I'm not afraid of what i know, I'm afraid of what i don't know.... This was so enlightening!
@denniss12119 күн бұрын
I was retired and lived in Montana and got bored .. so I work security in the park for a summer. I had a Chinese person ask me what time we let the animals out of their cages ... MANY other stories about non-US guests ...
@348Tobico8 күн бұрын
Funny to think about but terribly sad because it shows that communist Chinese mindset of cage everything(including humans) and only let it out when it suits you. At least the caged humans escape once in a while. The animals will never be so lucky.
@brucewilliamsstudio49328 күн бұрын
For some reason I'm just not surprised.
@paulbriggs30728 күн бұрын
Chinese literally have tourist attractions where the wild animals wander around enclosures that people visit and literally are caged at night.
@dirtfarmer658 күн бұрын
Their cranes are kept "indoors" & let out every morning.. 😂
@margaretflounders85108 күн бұрын
I've seen the Chinese caged safe trucks, in China, taken to where tigers were let loose, they were fed by keepers throwing full bodies of deer etc for the tigers to rip to pieces..Horrible
@TupeloHoney61047 күн бұрын
Beautiful wolves! 🥰
@HolladayEndAtBohicaGarden7 күн бұрын
agree
@waynelayton85687 күн бұрын
They were eradicated for a reason
@jeffk4647 күн бұрын
Yes, but couldn't they have gotten American wolves? Tired of all the outsourcing
@marshall47596 күн бұрын
Yes, their hides look good on my walls.
@acidheadzzz5 күн бұрын
@@marshall4759 You couldn’t figure out how to hunt anything even if your life depended upon it. The only thing on your walls are spider webs…..
@susanwright44145 күн бұрын
Wow! This was so great! Thanks
@truefossils66148 күн бұрын
In addition to wiping out the wolves in the appalachians the government wiped out the woodland bison, mountain lion, carolina parakeet, red wolf and elk. All that was left was a few black bears and deer. Then they brought in kudzoo which uglifies the smoky mountains to this day. Good Job federal government.
@ANTI-AIPAC8 күн бұрын
We've got the kudzu plant everywhere here in the Ozarks as well.
@douglascooper19877 күн бұрын
The Appalachian Red Wolves and Elk were re-introduced in the 90s, near Cherokee, but we don't live there anymore, so I don't know how they've faired since.🤔
@earlysda7 күн бұрын
fossils, your knowledge of history is horrible. Sorry you got a bad education.
@Athena-le7rm7 күн бұрын
So sad to destroy those mountain areas out of arrogant ignorance!
@Athena-le7rm7 күн бұрын
Kudzu is valuable for helping people get over alcoholism and cigarette addiction.
@andreahartford84507 күн бұрын
This is the most comprehensive documentary on the re-introduction of wolves into Yellowstone that I have ever seen. Well done.
@KootFloris6 күн бұрын
A few years ago there was a video: "How wolves changed the course of rivers." it's shorter, more clear and has a less annoying narrator.
@Really-cq2uw6 күн бұрын
I question the stats. Yellowstone has 4 million annual visitors, yet they claim 1/8 or 500,000 go just to see wolves…idk how they got that number??? And those people generate 34 million in revenue, yet the thumb nail claims 94 billion saved by “prevented erosion “ ?? Ok sure
@Elklife719-x5k6 күн бұрын
It’s very biased, opinionated and one-sided, there is a reason the hunting of wolves in Wyoming require no licenses, no seasons and no regulations!
@christinawarrington31926 күн бұрын
@@Elklife719-x5kit presents facts, documented evidence & outcomes over time, how is that biased? I have no issue with hunting for sustenance, that makes perfect sense. Yet to kill animals to get a prize, or to mount their head on their wall or their skin as a rug is the portrait of an ugly & hateful soul. Both sides can live together, but Both sides need to be honest for their view..
@johnlewis18305 күн бұрын
The Ghengis Khan of Wolves is still my favorite documentary. Wolves are amazing animals.
@suecopleston81217 күн бұрын
Truly wonderful, everything does have its place on our earth People also forget how dogs are connected to the wolfs I had seven small dogs, and I was the alpha, as they got older and one would die, they would howl. They would start by one and each one would join in, it sounded like a mournful song, and they would only do it once, it’s like they see their loved one in death and send them on their way to the rainbow bridge I was very privileged to have been given such a special gift from my dogs and I learned so much from them, God bless all the animals on our planet ❤❤
@soothinglycool98066 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing ❤
@Elklife719-x5k6 күн бұрын
No hunting license needed in Wyoming for hunting wolves all year round! They have realized they are devastating the ecosystem statewide congratulate us for taking them out!
@helen6776 күн бұрын
❤
@avelainmarie29079 күн бұрын
That's right! I learned about this a couple of decades ago and whoever thought of replacing the wolf population in that area was a genius. Got to leave nature alone to do what nature does, and that's keeping an ecosystem balance that humans too often destroy with their ignorance.
@meghan75478 күн бұрын
Thankfully they are delisted now and states can impose seasons on them.
@BrahmaKumaris_Fairfield8 күн бұрын
Except for the Indigenous Americans - they always knew what the 'superior' white man is just now discovering. Arrogance always has its price.
@Fluffylabellchatlane8 күн бұрын
@@BrahmaKumaris_Fairfield Tribal member here. You’re giving us more credit than we deserve. Our tribe poisons the Earth. Put oils on the land next to the creek and really doesn’t give a crap about preserving nature.
@PAMELAPORTER-ci7mr7 күн бұрын
@@BrahmaKumaris_Fairfield. I suspect our forebears did know, but for some bored people, killing was fun. Bison were extinct before wolves were in danger in the US, but farmers & ranchers in areas where there are predators tried to kill any & all of them. We have very few predators in Texas.
@jamesdolgener78927 күн бұрын
Sounds like the government screwed up and is now sunshine pumping! The ranchers have a whole different story of the destruction the wolves have caused! It's amazing how stupid people from the cities are to believe this crap!
@shilombaba5 күн бұрын
0:29 *"But to understand... we need to go back to when everything started... going wrong"*... 1883 and the Dutton's arrival...
@sandrajenkins68228 күн бұрын
It's documentaries like this that make me a huge YT fan. Excellent.
@duanekarlen54638 күн бұрын
Lived by wolves all my life trust them way more than most humans !
@sarantsatsralbuyan8 күн бұрын
True
@PamelaMacmillan-pc4rx8 күн бұрын
Me too
@bobk188 күн бұрын
So true.
@trinity08448 күн бұрын
Wolves only kill to eat, only humans kill because we can.
@EmilyB-c9w8 күн бұрын
❤❤❤❤
@minichatКүн бұрын
That is incredible!!!! Thanks for sharing ❤😊
@nancy143ish6 күн бұрын
We live in NW Minnesota. When the wolf packs are around, the coyotes stay away. That works for me.
@ltyr-mr2if6 күн бұрын
EVERYONE should see this video! We're old, and saw this story unfold over the decades. Wonderful, and beautiful!
@dianabrown8337 күн бұрын
Wolves are part of the balance of nature. Wish more people would realize that.
@karidennis61546 күн бұрын
This was informative and heartwarming at the same time, had to subscribe after this
@temirtaragay89325 күн бұрын
One of the most eye opening and useful videos in youtube. Thank you!
@bellarose65098 күн бұрын
This is an excellent report and analysis of ecological effects of human intervention, both negative and positive. Thank you!❤
@renferal529010 күн бұрын
This was actually rather interesting.
@rodneywoods444210 күн бұрын
Yes mostly made up too. Yes, they ate Bambi too! They changed Yellowstone and the money numbers are lies.
@renferal52909 күн бұрын
@@rodneywoods4442 You are most likely right.
@LuisENy-pr2ow3 күн бұрын
I just want to say thank you very much for sharing your videos with us. I appreciate your channel. Thank you bro 🇺🇸🫡💯🏆👍👍🚀🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇🎇
@michaeljays25986 күн бұрын
Wolves life matters 🐺
@Xianne0276 күн бұрын
@@michaeljays2598 Yes!!!! 👍
@turbo2236 күн бұрын
The wolves were only a small fraction of what helped Yellowstone, in the years before their reintroduction there were massive forest fires that burned down roughly a third of the park, in the years that followed the regrowth of the vegetation offered more food for the wildlife and that in turn caused the growth in the wildlife population.
@tearsien3 күн бұрын
Don't be delusional, the ecosystem was missing wolves because Americans killed them off due to being uneducated. Once you introduced the piece you forcefully removed, things started to flourish, what a surprise.
@slgcorporation5 күн бұрын
What a remarkable story! This should be played in every school in America.
@dimitriosfotopoulos36894 күн бұрын
The kids already know this. I learned most of this almost 50 years ago, back in 7th grade Earth Science, so clearly the ones who paid attention have known it for a while. The ones who really need to hear this on continuous replay are pro-development, anti-big government folks, who want to squeeze a profit from every square millimeter of land, and whose primary policy is "drill, baby drill", no matter the damage it causes.
@susancooper87126 күн бұрын
Extremely interesting would fully recommend this for all ages. Thank you for posting this informative and clear article. I will be keenly watching more of these.
@luckylogger75948 күн бұрын
Our native wolves were still in Idaho but this was covered up by crooked USFWS employees Ed Bangs being one of them. They purged this data out of the Boise IDFG office data base.
@mmafreaks48718 күн бұрын
facts, they decimated our elk in Idaho.
@ssmudsville7 күн бұрын
Interesting ...Do you know about Jim Beers and the pilfering of Pittman Robertson Funds ?
@theoldscout34786 күн бұрын
And the Canadian wolves were a larger sub-specie than what was still present in Montana.. North to south (Mexico) wolves get smaller.
@istvanglock74455 күн бұрын
What's your point?
@istvanglock74455 күн бұрын
@@mmafreaks4871 They brought them into balance with the environment, as they were designed to be.
@ElizabethKlimke4 күн бұрын
Incredible!!! Thank you. Elizabeth from South Africa.
@marionmarcetic72876 күн бұрын
Thank You For Releasing All Of These Beautiful And Majestic Wolves 🐺🐺🐺‼️❤️❤️❤️
@drew-rn9sb7 күн бұрын
They forget to mention that the species of wolf is NOT the original species that was native to the area. The Canadian wolf is much larger than the original species. And with the good, there is also the bad.
@lisaroselle45595 күн бұрын
They were grey wolves in 1926 when they were hunted to extinction in the park, they are the same species of wolf introduced in 1995. FACT.
@drew-rn9sb5 күн бұрын
@lisaroselle4559 They released Canadian timber Wolves-TOTALLY different
@Yet-another-lisa5 күн бұрын
Excellent video! Thank you so much🫶
@carolr78238 күн бұрын
Wolves are so beautiful! I also love beavers.
@slowery438 күн бұрын
wow, and anyone should care? You think people came her eto hear all about ylu and your personal likes huh? Wow. Do you like crickets? How about pepperoni pizza? What are your thoughts on parsley?
@Barnes4667 күн бұрын
@@slowery43 dude............
@Barnes4667 күн бұрын
I cannot agree more! All of these womderful animals are very important. Be well :)
@blenke17 күн бұрын
I love LOVE beavers!
@Barnes4667 күн бұрын
@@blenke1 who doesn't really?
@dennisheindl47089 күн бұрын
Dominant predators keep the entire eco system in balance.
@timmoore97368 күн бұрын
Dominant predators are eminently capable of destroying an eo system, as Oregon found out when Idaho wolves crossed over.
@jandrews62548 күн бұрын
No predators allowed, except humans with big pewpews
@rustyhowe39078 күн бұрын
@@timmoore9736 Yeah everything needs a balance to avoid too much or too little.
@NorthwoodsHunterWI8 күн бұрын
@@timmoore9736 that was also shown to be true in Wisconsin and Minnesota. They decimate all deer populations and then move on to the remaining animals in the region. They are incredibly efficient killers.
@robandnell43058 күн бұрын
They can also reck one. I have watched it happen.
@Determinationism9 күн бұрын
They killed all these wolves and created another problem. STOP INTERFERING WITH LIFE!
@marcleblanc62938 күн бұрын
You do understand it was a reintroduction? Wolves were always there till they got wiped out.....does their population need to be controlled yes....are they necessary for a healthy ecosystem....again yes. Sadly man continues to interfere with nature and for the most part it always backfires.
@Optimismus538 күн бұрын
europeans🤬😤
@mmafreaks48718 күн бұрын
we are apart of life.. wtf are you talking about?:
@PAMELAPORTER-ci7mr7 күн бұрын
@@mmafreaks4871 Ecosystems
@McCRBen7 күн бұрын
Cane toads were brought to Australia by scientists to eat the cane beetles. Whoops !
@douglascooper19877 күн бұрын
One of my Favorite Animals, I qas glad to see them returned, and Their Impact is Truly Amazing.👍👍
@charleseyosugorji921Күн бұрын
A very beautiful and educational piece
@garybrockwell20319 күн бұрын
Ha, ha, using a picture of Coronation Street, don't think they had a say😂🇬🇧⚖️🤫🎭
@Toffee83706 күн бұрын
Maybe it was because of the 'Rovers Return' in the picture?
@drgruber577 күн бұрын
They opened the doors on the enclosures of those Canadian wolves and said, "Take off, eh!".
Leader Wolf be like: Mandem & Galdem!! Nize it and hunt ehh!!!
@njm1971nyc5 күн бұрын
I love that the "locals" are a bunch of tourists checking out the set of "Coronation Street" in Manchester, England, sometime in the early 90s, by the look of it. Priceless 😂 Excellent bit of stock photo usage there 🤣 did AI put this thing together?!!
@tomtxtx96177 күн бұрын
Great video! Much appreciated! There can be enormous benefits from repairing ecosystems. One which can be done on small scale is regenerative/rotational grazing, which mimics how the buffalo would graze. Intensive grazing in a small area for a short time, then leave that area alone for a long time. By adopting this practice, ranchers increase biomass production by 2-5x while having healthier animals, lower costs, greater biodiversity and increased wildlife. It's a win all around.
@janicekoubek72577 күн бұрын
I think if you ask the ranchers raising livestock, they would have a different spin on this!
@leemonty0236 күн бұрын
At 73 I enjoyed being educated on the benefits that 12 Canadian Wolves had in helping the ecosystem and wildlife flourish. This documentation should be used and watched in educational classes.
@tomd65886 күн бұрын
So 12 became over 500 in 30 years...... What's going to happen when the wolf population becomes like the original elk problem?
@salvadorjacobo98972 сағат бұрын
This is what i call a quality video!!!!!
@KittyGrizGriz8 күн бұрын
I helped the “cause” by signing the signature petition way back in the early 1990s; when passing through my native Wyoming with my mom. Since then I’ve seen several wolves in YNP. One was an alpha female with her young pups. Another was 2 wolves taking down a deer in a small lake. It’s too bad that wolves are hated by some ranchers/land owners/hunters there.
@348Tobico8 күн бұрын
Great video! We need to pay attention when something as important as the resulting changes brought about by the wolf reintroduction can be quantified. These scientists fought a serious uphill battle to get the wolves back where they belonged. They deserve great honors for the work they stood behind and carried out. The entire world sees the advantages of working WITH nature to fix environmental damage instead of relying upon humans to be the "fix". THANK YOU for highlighting the results of this very difficult and risky program. I am a new subscriber because of it.
@RebeccaLee-d4g7 күн бұрын
God knew what He was doing when He created the Heavens and the Earth.
@atopedigree199510 сағат бұрын
The person who came up with this idea deserves a Nobel Prize
@Takwakin406 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing this story. I had tears in my eyes at the end. My people used to respect the diversity of the continent’s ecosystem. It’s the reason the land was clean & the animals were healthy pre-colonization. I have heard my knowledge keepers speak about the things you mention in this video. We are all related.
@001Rupes5 күн бұрын
This is just amazing. A very important video.
@devilghostface87982 күн бұрын
Had a " pet " Wolf. Great friend and an incredible animal. These guys are special and should be respected. Thats all .
@feralbluee7 күн бұрын
Like, duh! I’m just surprised as to how very much nature was affected!! Very good and important documentary. Thank you. Merci. Grazi. 🐺🐺🐺☀️🌷🌱
@HeidiSue606 күн бұрын
Love it! It makes sense, doesn’t it? Restore any given element of the ecosystem and restore the ecosystem ❤
@rustyhowe39078 күн бұрын
Nature also healed because it was in a sanctuary for wildlife with hard border policies hence it's a wonder story, this is chaos when it reaches more civilian/farming regions for the same equilibrium reasons.
@patrickporter18647 күн бұрын
Send the extra wolves to texas too prey on the wild pigs.
@dianewalker91549 күн бұрын
Both wolves and bison are keystone species of a healthy environment.
@stever25838 күн бұрын
As are crows, wolverines, hawks and eagles...
@STEPHENMacneil-wx5kv8 күн бұрын
@@dianewalker9154 Nice to see that you didn't call them "Buffalo."
@mmafreaks48718 күн бұрын
@@STEPHENMacneil-wx5kv tatonka.
@boozieboise7 күн бұрын
No such thing as 'keystone' species. Made up bullshyte.
@ealamin5 күн бұрын
the wolf population increased by 750 %, but the elk and bison are 70-80 % less , before the introduction of wolves in yellowstone there were 20000 elk and 1000 bison living there, now there are only 5000 elk and 200 bison.
@amilton2128Күн бұрын
I live on the edge of a ravine in downtown Toronto. Listening to the coyote pack at night is amazing.
@mihaelamcrae87705 күн бұрын
Majestic beings. I love them
@ErinIsReal7 күн бұрын
Wolves are highly intelligent, intuitive, loyal, and have a deep desire for freedom and have never been known to attack humans. They're vilified for enjoying lamb, while bears, mountain lions, elk, moose, etc., who attack humans and other wildlife aren't demonized. Leave the wolves alone! They're an asset to humanity.
@Tigertail7806 күн бұрын
Russia got rid of them bc they kill people. There is a story of them killing a whole wedding party in their way home on a sleigh in the winter. If they are hungry,they will kill humans. Russia actually told us not to bring the wolf back. There is a family in Washington who have lost 100 cattle to wolves who hunt for sport. That means, that sometimes they will leave an animal half alive and half eaten. They are called predators for a reason.
@BenDovers48372Channel6 күн бұрын
Never been known to attack humans? lol, your clueless
@richardservatius54056 күн бұрын
you have never seen the video of a wolf chasing a bicycler in canada?
@Brinta35 күн бұрын
@ErinIsReal There’s an article on Wikipedia called “List of wolf attacks”. It’s a pretty long list. But wolf attacks are relativily rare compared to some other animals.
@tabularasa77755 күн бұрын
Leave the elks , mountain lions , bears and moose alone too . What's a few mauled humans
@loribaumann5725 күн бұрын
Wonderful video/ needed. Heartwarming
@Julsfr8 күн бұрын
Love wolves... they need to be protected always...
@briannagorman31198 күн бұрын
Agreed, put them in a zoo so all people can see them
@ANTI-AIPAC8 күн бұрын
@@briannagorman3119I'd rather see people in the zoo exhibits 😅
@kaptainkickit758310 күн бұрын
awesome video
@matthewstephens650221 сағат бұрын
Thats insane. Wolves from all different places and families went and made families. That is amazing.
@temujin26 күн бұрын
the canadian wolves immediately began hunting every maple tree they could find, using the timber to build a tim hortons. they grew increasingly more polite and apologetic, sending the most hilarious among them to chicago then to NY and then when the money was so good LA.
@ronniemaynor44346 күн бұрын
My wife and I love Tim Hortons.
@judithcampbell17055 күн бұрын
I've studied wolves since 1995. They are all needed and must be protected, and given enough habitat to flourish, from now to the end of time. Thank you 💛 for this excellent documentary about them.
@568843daw5 күн бұрын
BS dude! You are Not a Wildlife Biologist. You have no skin in the game and are simply an armchair activist. You make me laugh. 🤣😂
@GloriaCote-o1c3 күн бұрын
We have so much to learn. I loved this story and have no doubt that it has and will affect me in ways that I may never know.
@1safety4all8 күн бұрын
Brilliant and amazing real news story on the natural environment with no spin, Left or Right
@PAMELAPORTER-ci7mr7 күн бұрын
It's just 100% science. (Unless maybe RFK jr's nearby?)
@kf10007 күн бұрын
Human hunters could do the same thing.
@Purplepiperpicklepeople7 күн бұрын
@@kf1000that’s simply not true and the video addresses it. The presence of predators is a dynamic element that can not be represented by modern hunting techniques. It’s not about numbers alone
@Purplepiperpicklepeople7 күн бұрын
Managed hunting has its own positive impacts. But it isn’t in tune with the ecosystem in such a way. When I hunt, I only take from nature and give nothing back except maybe some organs and blood. When wolves hunt, they live in the environment and alter the patterns of life. They don’t just kill an elk or a coyote and take it away. All of the the coyotes and elk they don’t kill change their behavior and there is a cascading effect that reaches all living things in their environment
@kf10007 күн бұрын
@Purplepiperpicklepeople if we implemented year-round bow hunting of elk. The hunters would take the role of the wolves, doing everything the wolves do. You could even have a rule requiring hunters just take SOME meat, and leave the rest of the carcass behind for other creatures and the environment. The hunters would do everything that wolves do.
@dorotaazzopardi87187 күн бұрын
🇨🇦 to the rescue ❤
@StormyHotwolf885 күн бұрын
While I already knew this story because I love wolves so much, I appreciate this video :)
@gerardfenn39888 күн бұрын
Just a Plain Awesome Documentary. Great Orator. Fascinating facts and research. Thumbs Up and a New Sub. Love It.
@kathya88276 күн бұрын
Thank you for some truth about wolves! It’s frustrating to constantly see so many flat out lies about these beautiful creatures. Have loved wolves all my life and studied different packs. Great for our ecosystem -no, they’re not perfect but who or what is? May God continue to bless us all.
@briandarazs66204 күн бұрын
I live in the Canadian Rockies in my cabin. I've never, ever had any problems with the wolves. In fact, and since you studied them you probably know this, there's not one documented case of a wolf, or pack of wolves attacking a human and killing one. It amazes me how many don't believe that. I've actually had way more problems with bull moose in the rut. Not an animal to mess with at that time of the year. I always give them a very wide berth at that time of year.
@sooz94334 күн бұрын
I'm heading out of my 70s and I recall learning in school about the balance of nature and the food chain. We learned how removing one living creature could wreck that whole balance. I'll never forget how it changed the way I viewed our world and other living creatures. Thank you for this cautionary video.
@cjp5924 күн бұрын
The Canadian-Now Yellowstone Wolves are not just apex predators. They naturally bring excellence with them. Nature is the ultimate supreme of social engineering.
@Ricardorhino884 күн бұрын
Most likely the same type of wolf like in Yellowstone used to have 😂there all Native wolves to America so they'd naturally be the same its the same with Native Americans throughout north and south America
@Fluffylabellchatlane8 күн бұрын
Great video. Thank you so much. I sent it to my grandkids and my son who is a hunter.
@ealamin5 күн бұрын
don't believe it. make your own studies. Wolves are killers before the introduction of wolves in yellowstone there were 20000 elk and 1000 bison living there now there are only 5000 elk and 200 bison.
@tmcevoy10003 күн бұрын
The late Mollie Beattie, Director of the US Fish and Wildlife Service at the time, spearheaded this project. She was the first forester to serve as director, and the first woman. And, she was my colleague at the University of Vermont where we became good friends. Even though her pivotal role in this effort is not discussed, it would have been okay with Mollie since for her it is the results that matter. Mollie is the person on the left, shelping the wolf carrier through the snow near the beginning of video. She was a wonderful person.
@royklopfenstein52789 күн бұрын
Grandma, what big ears you have!
@sherryhall64377 күн бұрын
Interested in the documents of tracking of the initially released wolves in Yellowstone. One lone hungry wolf charged a young boy less than a year later, on our property in the high Uintah’s near Elizabeth Pass. Wolves definitely did not stay in Yellowstone.
@darlenelarochelle40117 күн бұрын
Wolves do not know boundaries. No young boy should be in the woods by themselves, unprotected. Its a dangerous place. Grew up in N Idaho woods, lots of scary predators out there,but the woods alone are enough to kill a child. No wolf needed.
@carollever46625 күн бұрын
Very interesting discussion. Thank you
@Elklife719-x5k6 күн бұрын
Paid and congratulated Wolfhunter here! We re-introduced them in 1995 and they became out of control in Wyoming . We managed them at massive rates!! You don’t even need a hunting license!😂
@ahill46426 күн бұрын
hyuk hyuk hyuk 🙄 🤫
@pikachusurfing7 күн бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤ These types of videos that respect mother nature give me hope for modern humanity. The indigenous people that called the Americas their home knew the spiritual and scientific importance of the symbiotic relationship between humans and mother nature.
@earlysda7 күн бұрын
And those people destroyed each other all the time and couldn't take care of their environment.
@pikachusurfing7 күн бұрын
@@earlysda please keep your negativity to yourself thank you. Find somewhere else to spread it.
@earlysda7 күн бұрын
@@pikachusurfing pika wants to put her head in the sand and sing. OK.
@ChrisWilliams-zs6qq3 күн бұрын
Understanding why life is so fascinating just took a completely new meaning.
@AntoineLavoisier-y3e3 күн бұрын
Anyone else notice the pictures of the vole and weasel were identical (8:45), only mirror reflections? Was this on purpose to get more comments and increase engagement? Well, I fell for it. I find these goofs pretty annoying and feel the need to point them out, which, ironically, probably encourages their occurrences…