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OCTOBER 2011 NEWSLETTER Colorado Wolf and Wildlife Center FREE APPLICATION for your iPhone or iPad on iTunes Download yours TODAY!! Our Full moon tour this month was the most successful in the history of CWWC. We have exciting news that you will read in November’s newsletter of where the funds are going to. Everyone had such a great time, so we are thinking that next year we may have our full moon tours on our traditional Saturday night PLUS adding Sunday night since we had to turn down over 70 people who wanted to attend. Thank you to everyone who joined us and to the wonderful staff and volunteers who make this Center what it is. Tracy getting ready to go over rules before the grand event of the meet and greet Everyone waiting to pet Tala

October 2011 Newsletter

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October 2011 Newsletter Colorado Wolf and Wildlife Center

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Page 1: October 2011 Newsletter

OCTOBER 2011 NEWSLETTER

Colorado Wolf and Wildlife Center FREE APPLICATION for your iPhone or

iPad on iTunes

Download yours TODAY!!

Our Full moon tour this month was the most successful in the history of CWWC. We have exciting news that you will read in November’s newsletter of where the funds are going to. Everyone had such a great time, so we are thinking that next year we may have our full moon tours on our traditional Saturday night PLUS adding Sunday night since we had to turn down over 70 people who wanted to attend. Thank you to everyone who joined us and to the wonderful staff and volunteers who make this Center what it is.Tracy getting ready to go over rules before the grand event of the meet and greet

Everyone waiting to pet Tala

Page 2: October 2011 Newsletter

www.wolfeducation.org

Each month we are featuring a different animal in danger of extinction (already on the ES list) or an animal that is scheduled for inclusion to the Endangered Species list. We’ve set up a display table in the Visitor Center with information on the animal of the month and a donation jar. At the end of each month, monies collected will be sent to a non-profit ambassador organization....

Our November recipient is:

Mexican Gray WolvesThe Endangered Wolf Center in Eureka, MO.

www.endangeredwolfcenter.org

Our MissiON The purpose of the Endangered Wolf Center is simple: To save wolves and other wild canids from the precarious path toward extinction. The roots of our legacy run deep, and guide our mission even today. In 1971 the Endangered Wolf Center was founded when world-renowned zoologist Dr. Marlin Perkins, his wife Carol, and a group of individuals banded together to address the plight of endangered wolves. Today, our nonprofit organization is considered the cornerstone of wolf conservation in America, providing a real alternative to extinction for hundreds of wolves and other canid populations through a comprehensive program of education, behavioral and reproductive research and carefully managed breeding.

The Endangered Wolf Center is located on 63 isolated wooded acres with in Washington University’s Tyson Research Center approximately 20 miles southwest of St. Louis, Missouri. The isolation allows our wolves and other canids the opportunity to become candidates for reintroduction into their native habitats through the coordinated efforts of the US Fish & Wildlife Service. Our premier facility has been responsible for successful managed breeding and reintroduction programs for the Mexican Gray Wolf and the Red Wolf.

Maned Wolf

Page 3: October 2011 Newsletter

www.wolfeducation.org

Oct 7th -1st snow of the year

I said this is my friend!

Exhausted mike trenching the quarantine pen with a broken wrist. In this photo you will see the cable from the ATV pulling the track trencher because it was burying itself in the ground every stretch along the way.

Day Spa FUN!

Page 4: October 2011 Newsletter

www.wolfeducation.org

Wood chipper has cut over 15 cords of wood so far. We have it’s work cut out for it....

Chuck with Red Bear Excavating in Florissant has done wonderful work for us. He is booked until spring.

Grading a ditch for water run off

The rocky mountains are not called that for nothing

Page 5: October 2011 Newsletter

www.wolfeducation.org

Brian has built and created so many things for the wolf center. If anyone would like beautiful work done like we have at our Center, call him. His number is 719-499-4718.

Beginning of our new fire pit

Jake using the grout bag

Brian and Rachael. Rachael tries her hand at stonework

Rock work completed!

Page 6: October 2011 Newsletter

www.wolfeducation.org

1 2 3 4 5 sunday monday tuesday wednesday thursday friday saturday

6 7 8 9 10 11 12

13 14 15 16 17 18 19

20 21 22 23 24 25 26

27 28 29 30

NOVEMBER events & special tours

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

BUFFalo hide ToUr

4PM

FUll Moon ToUr

5PM

TUrKeY ToSS

9-10aM

Walk on the Wild Side or

Feeding Fest Tour 4PM

Walk on the Wild Side or

Feeding Fest Tour 4PM

Walk on the Wild Side or

Feeding Fest Tour 4PM

Walk on the Wild Side or

Feeding Fest Tour 4PM

these tours and events are in addition to our standard 10am, noon & 2pm tours

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

4PM Feeding Fest

Tour

BUFFalo hide ToUr : Saturday, november 5 · 4PM : $20/adult · $10/childOur wolves go wild for fresh buffalo hides! You will see them roll, rip and play tug of war with the hides. Hides are important to help with digestion, dental health and also provide enrichment for their enclosures. Don’t miss out on this unique experience. reserve your spot today... space is limited!

RESERVATION

S REQUIRED

FOR ALL TO

URS

AND SPECIA

L EVENTS

719-687-97

42

All tours have limited space

and we have a no-cancellation

policy from may-October.

Page 7: October 2011 Newsletter

www.wolfeducation.org

NOVEMBER 12th, 2011 Please be here by 5:00 pm to check in. Meet and Greet one of our wolves at 5:30 - Tour starts immediately after and lasts approximately 1 hour.

• Wear warm clothes and good boots• Bringacameraandaflashlight• Cocoa and coffee will be provided

adUlTS: $25 · KidS: $15 (8-12 yrs) no kids under 8

RESERVATIONS REquIREd 719-687-9742

full moon tour

walk ON thE wilD SiDE

FEEDiNg FESt tOUR

aNNUal tURkEY tOSS

SUNDaYS at 4PMStart by walking with a guide through the Center and seeing the wolves, coyote and fox then prepare for a 1/2 mile walk with one of our wolves down a dirt forest road. It can be steep in places. On this tour you will learn about some of the native plants, trees and mountain ranges. $75 per person - snacks and water will be provided. Photos to a CD can be prearranged of your experience for $50. Space is limited to only 8 people ages 15 and older only please.

tUES, wED, FRi, Sat aND SUNDaYmeet our resident animals during the feeding tour and observe them when they are most active...feeding time! Learn about hunting, howling and hierarchy and communicate with the pack in a group howl! Adults $20 · Children 12 and under $10

thURSDaY, NOV. 24 · 9-10 aMBe a part of feeding our wolf, coyote and fox families! Participate in a morning group howl while you are surrounded by wolves and coyotes! Refreshments of cocoa and apple cider will be served along with pumpkin desserts.

ALL AGES WELCOmE - Just bring yourself and a cameraDonation fee of $20 adults and $10 for kids 12 & underRSVP 719-687-9742 (this is a pre-paid event). Limited space available.

Page 8: October 2011 Newsletter

Information presented on this newsletter is considered public information (unless otherwise noted) and may be distributed or copied. Use of appropriate byline/photo/image credit is requested. Some of the documents in this newsletter may contain live feed references (or pointers) to information created and maintained by other organizations. Please note that CWWC does not control and cannot guarantee the relevance, timeliness, or accuracy of these outside materials.

...conservation education preservation

“We can judge the heart

of a man by his treatment of animals.”

~ Immanual Kant

For current wolf articles and to be a voice

through knowledge

BECOmE A FAn OF CWWC

www.projectcoyote.org

Mexican Grey Wolveswww.mexicanwolves.org

Natural Resources Defense Councilwww.nrdc.org www.defendersofwildlife.org

WilD EaRth GuaRDiaNswww.wildearthguardians.org

www.aza.org

“An animal’s eyes have the

power to speak a great language.”

~ Martin Buber

working together to make a difference...

NEWSLETTER BY: Melissa Macis | [email protected] | www.wix.com/missymacis/portfolio

JUDGE REJECTS STANCE ON POLAR BEARA judge has thrown out a key section of an Interior Dept. rule that declared global warming is threatening the survival of the polar bear. U.S. Dist. Judge Emmet Sullivan’s decision directs the Obama administration to set out a timetable for completing the required environmental reviews. Sullivan left the interim 2008 designation intact

while the case continues.

WOLF CARNAGE FEARED WITH 37,000 HUNTERSA coalition has sought an injuction on wolf rifle hunting in Montana and Idaho. There are about 1,000 wolves there, and 37,000 permits to kill them were issued.Bow-and-arrow hunters have shot 17 of Montana’s once-threatened wolf population since a controversial wolf hunt started at the beginning

of September, while 60 wolves have been killed in neighboring Idaho. Now, big game rifle-hunting season is about to start, bringing thousands of hunters into the mountains at a time when early snowfall will make wolves much easier to spot and chase. Conservation groups went to court Monday seeking an emergency injuction to block the hunts until a federal appeals court can decide whether they’re legal. “General rifle season is about to start in Montana; it just started in Idaho. About 37,000 people now have wolf-hunting permits, and they’re going to be going with high-powered rifles and long-range scopes after a little more than a thousand wolves,” Michael Garrity, executive director of Alliance for the Wild Rockies, said in an interview. He said a coalition of groups, including Friends of the Clearwater and WildEarth Guardians, is asking the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to rule quickly on an emergency order, pending a hearing next month on claims that the fast-track federal legislation that authorized the hunts is illegal.

in the news....