The Real Wolf is an in-depth study of the impact that wolves have had on big game and livestock populations as a federally protected species. Expert authors Ted B. Lyon and Will N. Graves, sift through the myths and misinformation surrounding wolves and present the facts about wolves in modern times. Each chapter in the book is meticulously researched and written by authors, biologists, geneticists, outdoor enthusiasts, and wildlife experts who have spent years studying wolves and wolf behavior. Every section describes a unique aspect of the wolf in the United States. The Real Wolf does not call for the eradication of wolves from the United States but rather advocates a new system of species management that would allow wolves, game animals, and farmers to coexist with one another in a way that is environmentally sustainable.
Contributors to this groundbreaking environmental book include: Cat Urbigkit, award-winning wildlife author and photographer Dr. Valerius Geist, foremost expert of big game in North America Matthew Cronin, environmental researcher and geneticist Rob Arnaud, president of Montana Outfitters and Guides Association
This book is utter dumbfounding foolishness. If you want to read about wolves and be informed, read something like "Of Wolves and Men" by Barry Lopez or better yet David L. Mech's excellent works like "Wolves: Behavior, Ecology and Conservation". This book is essentially a bunch of over-hyped gripes, straight bending of truth and opinion being juxtaposed as "truth". As an Idaho native I find this book garbage and indicative that this state is chock full of fools like Ted B. Lyon (Or as I call him, 'Ted Be Lyin'.')
It is so refreshing to read a book on wolves that is “non PC” and is reflective of the experience that grassroots folks like me actually have with wolves. Experiential facts instead of possibly biased public sentiment manufactured by media influence and conflicts-of-interest strewn public-funded research. I routinely encounter wolves on and off my property and see their impacts on our local Upper Michigan deer herd. There are consequences to the increased unmanaged wolf population that the public rarely hears about, in part because it just is ignored by the media. Also, little authoritative biases have big impacts on perceptions. For example, the Michigan DNR does not fully disclose the statistical results of their wolf population studies and reports only the lower end of their confidence interval results. Wisconsin is starting to do the same thing — they used to report the full statistical picture on the likely wolf population and that went out the door with their latest announcement.
Settlers and ranchers hunted these apex predators for a reason. In recent years misguided pro-animal activists have been instrumental in having larger Canada wolves relocated to the Rocky Mountain states where they were protected by Federal law until their numbers are out of control. This book is a must read if you want to understand the impact these wanton killers are having on our wildlife and domestic animals.