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Hunting & Fishing Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

ranger1183

Gunny Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Jul 18, 2006
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Whitefish, MT, USA
Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/8565567.stm


Wolves in Alaska are suspected of killing a teacher in an isolated village while she was out jogging.

An autopsy has revealed that Candice Berner, 32, died of injuries sustained in an animal attack, officials said.

Her body was dragged off a rural road, leaving a bloody track, into the nearby bush and was surrounded by wolf tracks.

Police said wolves in the area had been aggressive recently. If confirmed, it is believed to be the first fatal wolf attack in the US in 50 years.


“ There were wolf tracks all around the body ”
Col Audie Holloway Alaska State Troopers


The Alaska State Medical Examiner said Ms Berner's cause of death was "multiple injuries due to animal mauling".

Col Audie Holloway, of the Alaska State Troopers, said: "There's no other carnivores in that area that are out and active.

"There were wolf tracks all around the body, and drag marks associated with those tracks."

Ms Berner had moved to Alaska from Slippery Rock, Pennsylvania, in August to work as a special needs teacher in the small community of Chignik Lake, about 474 miles (760km) south of Anchorage.

She had been training for long-distance running, a regional school official said.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/americas/8565567.stm

Published: 2010/03/12 23:32:29 GMT
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

Looking at the location of the village and the known attitude of natives towards caucasion teachers I believe this has the potential to be a person vs person murder with wolves left to clean up and take the blame. I have been to many of these villages and this is not beyond a village community up here. This idea of course could be called conspiracy theory but statistically it is much more plausable. It is definately an idea that could not be discussed openly up here because the political correct would not hear it.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: partisan1911</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Looking at the location of the village and the known attitude of natives towards caucasion teachers I believe this has the potential to be a person vs person murder with wolves left to clean up and take the blame. I have been to many of these villages and this is not beyond a village community up here. This idea of course could be called conspiracy theory but statistically it is much more plausable. It is definately an idea that could not be discussed openly up here because the political correct would not hear it. </div></div> I met a missionary from there several years ago that ministered to the remote villages. He told us that incest and alot of other taboo stuff went on in those remote villages.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

First let me say I have nothing against native americans, especially those in the lower 48 that have a respected culture with a few rejects like any culture. Native Alaskans beat a different drum. Statistically they have the highest percentage of rape, incest, alcohol abuse and crime in general above any other city in the United States. It is thier culture. Most of the villages are 100% government funded to include homes, utilities, jobs, schools etc. Generally speaking they want to be fed money but be left alone which is why they are not included in "no child left behind" and other programs that answer to federal money. Many "white" teachers have tried to help but have been ran off by elders and children alike. I don't know all the details of the kill site but I can assure you that if blood is spilled in the woods of Alaska the wolves and other predators will come.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

I've been following this story for a few day on the ADN websit. Acording to the autopsy it was wolves that killed the gir.

Regarding the natives hatred of whites in their villages, for the most part if total bullshit, especieally where teachers are concerned.

I spent 19 years in the Alaska National Gurad, working with the natives. I was an X-O on St Lawrance Island and CO of C Company 1/297 Infantry which consisted of 5 villages NW of Nome.

Sorry but these people are wonderful people and arnt gonna kill a school teacher just because she is white.

I'll go with the Troopers findings.............it was wolves.

On a side note, on year we had a lady who was beat to death in her back yard. It was a brutal crime and one mess of a crime scene. We were half way through processing the scene when the pathologist called us identifying the suspect...........a friggin moose.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

One of the articles associated with this report said the male wolves up there go from 100 to 125 lbs. or so while the females run about 15 or 20 lbs. lighter.

Wouldn't be much fun trying to fight off two or three animals that outweighed you. The article said she was less than 5 ft. tall so she wasn't a big person either.

I won't go in the woods without a handgun, even around here.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

Hell coyotes got that singer in Canada a little while ago. Why couldn't wolves that have 50lbs on coyotes have done this.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

Yes, a wolf could easily kill a human, especially in a pack.

The question is: would they? I've heard conflicting opinions of whether wolves will/will not attack humans. I do find it interesting that many of the pioneer stories on the early plains involve fear of wolf attacks at night. Don't know if they are proven but they seem credible.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

A friend of me was some years back on a business trip in azerbaijan. He was staying a night at the dadja (weekend getaway) of a bigwig. He was told not to exit the house at night, under no circumstances!
The bigwig owned crossbreed of wolf and dogs, this nasty bastards attacked everything in the fenced yard. They were let loose afer dark!
Such feral crossbreeds were a real problem over there in rural areas. My pal said there was everybody afraid of such animals, as they attack very agrssively.
As my pal said, he never heard of wolf attacks on humans, the bigwig said: "You cannot tell anybody, if you are eaten!"

Could such crossbreeding happen in Alaska?
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

The Wisconsin Outdoor Journal had two articles about a home owner behind his house cutting wood and a logger working in the woods that had wolves pair up and circle them. The home owner scared them off with his chain saw but it didn't work for the logger he had to get up into his skidder to get away from them.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

What was she doing out jogging alone and unarmed in a known wolf inhabited area? That's just plain stupid. Sure, kill all the wolves, kill all the mountain lions, kill all the bears and what are you left with - the biggest, vilest predator of all, man. I'll take my chances with wolves vs. a night in Detroit, Camden, or any other such city in America. (Rant I know.)
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Bushmaster7</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Sure, kill all the wolves, kill all the mountain lions, kill all the bears and what are you left with - the biggest, vilest predator of all, man. I'll take my chances with wolves vs. a night in Detroit, Camden, or any other such city in America. (Rant I know.) </div></div>

Finally some sense.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: DakotaDeer</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Yes, a wolf could easily kill a human, especially in a pack.

The question is: would they? I've heard conflicting opinions of whether wolves will/will not attack humans. I do find it interesting that many of the pioneer stories on the early plains involve fear of wolf attacks at night. Don't know if they are proven but they seem credible. </div></div>

Why wouldn't they...a super predator being confronted with a small critter displaying prey behavior?

I've got a good friend who is a wolf biologist...he contends that this type of stuff is BOUND to happen...

I get very tired of hearing that tired old "There has never been a documented wolf attack in North America"

...it's kinda hard to prove anything when your earthly remains reside in a pile of wolf shit...
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Jayhawker</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: DakotaDeer</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Yes, a wolf could easily kill a human, especially in a pack.

The question is: would they? I've heard conflicting opinions of whether wolves will/will not attack humans. I do find it interesting that many of the pioneer stories on the early plains involve fear of wolf attacks at night. Don't know if they are proven but they seem credible. </div></div>

Why wouldn't they...a super predator being confronted with a small critter displaying prey behavior?

I've got a good friend who is a wolf biologist...he contends that this type of stuff is BOUND to happen...

I get very tired of hearing that tired old "There has never been a documented wolf attack in North America"

...it's kinda hard to prove anything when your earthly remains reside in a pile of wolf shit...


</div></div>

Yeah! Because wolves definitely leave absolutely no trace that its prey ever existed!

I get tired of hearing there is no documented evidence of alien abductions too, but how can one NOT believe in alien abductions when they take your whole body and disappear in to space.

Get a clue dude. When your best evidence is a complete lack of it, your argument 'aint worth shit.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

I might get flamed for this. I truly feel bad for what happened to the lady, but not surprised. If my sister wore a mini skirt with fishnet stocking and started walking dark alleys at night in the ghetto part of town, i would not be surprised that she got attacked. It doesnt make it ok, but we all have to take responsibility for our own actions. The wolves were here long before us. It is not a mystery that they are out in wild in those areas.

You can not be that naive to think i am 5'1" and just gonna jog in the woods and everything is going to be ok. They are wolves, they get hungry and they gotta eat.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: alpha6164</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I might get flamed for this. I truly feel bad for what happened to the lady, but not surprised. If my sister wore a mini skirt with fishnet stocking and started walking dark alleys at night in the ghetto part of town, i would not be surprised that she got attacked. It doesnt make it ok, but we all have to take responsibility for our own actions. The wolves were here long before us. It is not a mystery that they are out in wild in those areas.

You can not be that naive to think i am 5'1" and just gonna jog in the woods and everything is going to be ok. They are wolves, they get hungry and they gotta eat. </div></div>

Nope - have to agree with you 100%, Wolves in Alaska, Cougars in California....

In Alaska they (White people) always seem to be looking for a reason to kill them- can bet you this will be exploited.
THey just lifted the ban on helicopter hunting them too, saying their stocks are up.

Shit happens, it sucks but it happens.

I glassed a pack of wolves from about half a mile to mile away once while out moose hunting - neatest thing I've ever seen.

Wolves must have been starving to eat a human, they won't normally take a human unless there is no other fod.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

Wolves are a convenient scapegoat.

Whilst it may be a possibility, it is also (as pointed out by another poster) not beyond the realms of possibility that this is a straight forward murder with the body dragged out to be disposed of by wild animals as in the Dingo Baby murder down in O and a UK girl murdered and raped in kenya whose body was similarly disposed of to name but two.

And, even if this was the first proven "wolf on human kill" for 50 years, to maintain perspective....how many US citizens are killed or mauled by dangerous "domesticated" breeds such as pitbulls, or other wild species such as mountain lions or bears or reptiles suchas crocs/alligators or snakes each year?

PLUS....being the BBC is no longer a guarantee of the veracity or accuracy of any story!
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

Wolves have slaughter game for years in Alaska. Wolves are killing game at an alarming rate. Some of the units I hunted lack all game, its hard to find even a shrew. Of course over hunting is the blame too but wolves have killed so much game that they have become hungry and bold to find a new source of food. Of course nature can fix itself, it has long before humans got involved it just takes longer.

Wolves have killed dogs in the bush for years for food but the last few years wolves have become very bold and have stalked humans at the boundaries of cities and have attacked dogs hiking with humans. Last summer two soldier's wives were stalked on Fort Rich and wolves killed a dog, I do believe it was on a leash, wolf ran ran up and snatched the dog.

We are still fighting those from outside who do not know or understand Alaska but get involved with our policies. They have a strong otuside following and it is growing in Alaska with tons of new left coast moving up. I am not sure why but as soon as Alaska is mentioned here or anywhere, there are always people who know more about Alaska even though they have never visited let alone never lived here.

I will not get into the native scrap too much. I am not fond of all natives living off taxes with free everything but then again so do many of the other races, its the way. Alcohol is very bad juju in Alaska bush for all races. Alcohol is very bad juju for city dwellers too. As far as incest, sat on Grand Jury for months and heard some of the most disgusting things a human can do to their family and not all were native. Bad people do bad things.


Troopers: Autopsy shows village teacher likely killed by wolves

by Rebecca Palsha
Thursday, March 11, 2010

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – A memorial service was held Thursday night for an itinerant teacher most likely killed by wolves.

An autopsy conducted Thursday shows that wolves likely killed 32-year-old Candice Berner in the southwest Alaska village of Chignik Lake, according to the Alaska State Troopers.

Village residents found Berner's body a short distance from town on Monday.

Multiple injuries due to animal mauling caused Berner's death, trooper Col. Audie Holloway said, referencing a report from the state medical examiner's office.

Information from state biologists and village residents, along with the autopsy results, point to wolves as the likely killer, according to a trooper press release.

"We're confident this is a wolf attack," Holloway said in an interview Thursday. "To be extremely precise, it's an animal attack of some sort. But we think that all probability and the preponderance of all the information we have is that it was wolves."

"The tracks alongside the drag marks, and the fact that the drag marks had blood in them probably means that she was alive as they were moving her," Holloway said.

Berner's father says she fought back against her attackers.

"It's hard, it's really hard. I feel horrible, you know, empty," Robert Berner said.

"They said Candice put up a good fight," he said, "and there must have been two, maybe three of them."



"Her left arm was torn mostly off and both her thighs were badly, badly damaged. But her face was untouched and her body was in decent form," he said.

Robert Berner says he was told Candice was most likely attacked from behind.

Troopers and the Department of Fish and Game are coordinating a response and expect to have teams in the village Friday.

"The helicopter and the pilot are going to fly some biologists around to try to either capture or exterminate the wolves that are in that particular area," Holloway said.

But unless the wolves have a disease or rabies, Robert Berner doesn't want the animals to die.

"I don't feel any need for vengeance at all. Candice was a risk-taker, she's fearless…because they hadn't had one other incident in the history of the place she probably felt reasonably safe out there on that trail," he said.

Troopers say a downswing in the caribou herd and the moose population have likely pushed the wolves to the edge.

"I would say any time anyone ventures out into the wilderness, or even at your front door -- because a lot of people live in the wilderness -- is to always be in a position to protect yourself," said wildlife trooper Col. Gary Folger. "Interactions with wildlife can occur at any moment."

Berner, originally from Pennsylvania, lived in Perryville and traveled from town to town as a special education teacher for the Lake and Peninsula School District. She started teaching in Bush Alaska in August.

Chignik Lake is a community of about 105 people on the south side of the Alaska Peninsula, about 475 miles southwest of Anchorage.

Contact Rebecca Palsha at [email protected]


Teacher likely killed by wolves, troopers say

CHIGNIK LAKE: Evidence points to attack by two or three animals, troopers say.

By JAMES HALPIN
[email protected]

Published: March 11th, 2010 10:52 PM
Last Modified: March 12th, 2010 07:28 AM

Alaska State Troopers on Thursday concluded a woman found dead in Chignik Lake early this week was most likely killed in a wolf attack, and state authorities were headed there to try to capture or kill the animals.

Candice Berner, 32, appeared to have been killed Monday evening during a run along a remote road outside the Alaska Peninsula community, according to troopers.

The state medical examiner concluded, following an autopsy Thursday morning, that the cause of death was "multiple injuries due to animal mauling." Based on interviews with biologists and villagers in Chignik Lake, troopers concluded wolves were the animals most likely responsible, troopers spokeswoman Megan Peters said in a statement.

The state Department of Fish and Game still wants to conduct DNA testing to help study the incident, but troopers are convinced it was a wolf attack, troopers director Col. Audie Holloway said.

"We are as close to 100 percent certain as you can be," Holloway said.

Troopers investigating the scene found many wolf paw prints around the body, which had been partially predated, and bloody drag marks in the snow, he said. Investigators were able to conclude after the autopsy that the animal injuries caused the death and were not inflicted post-mortem, he said."She was bleeding as she was being moved, being drug, and the damage to the throat," Holloway said. "The medical examiner concluded that she wasn't killed by any other method and that the damage to the throat was severe. There were animal bite marks on the throat.

"Wolves, just like big cats, usually attack the wind pipe area and try to control the victim that way."

It appeared the attack was predatory, motivated by wolves wanting something to eat, he said.

Berner, a special education teacher based in Perryville, was originally from Slippery Rock, Pa., and arrived in Alaska last August. She stood about 4 feet 11 inches tall and was an athletic person, an avid runner, according to her family. Officials from the Lake and Peninsula School District said Berner, who rotated among five villages and arrived in Chignik Lake on Monday, left work at the end of the day to go for a run.

A group of snowmachiners found her a short time later. Her gloves were in the road and Berner's body had been dragged off the road down a hill.

Bob Berner said troopers told him his daughter had an iPod with her and was running toward town when the wolves attacked her about a mile and a half out. There appeared to have been a chase and struggle that lasted about 150 feet before she went down, he said Thursday by phone from Pennsylvania.

"She was probably not aware of them until they actually lunged at her or attacked her," Berner said. "She did the best she could, but they figured there were two of them for sure, maybe three ... She put up a struggle. It was not an immediate thing."

Retired Fish and Game biologist Mark McNay, who has studied wolf attacks in North America, said that the attack was highly unusual and appeared to be the first documented case of a fatal wolf attack by healthy, wild wolves in Alaska. The only other such case in North America took place in northern Saskatchewan in 2005, he said.

That Berner was running at the time might have contributed to the attack, he said.

"The whole running thing is something that can elicit a predatory attack," McNay said. "It suggests vulnerability."

Holloway said troopers and Fish and Game biologists were on their way to Chignik Lake Thursday planning to capture or kill the responsible wolves. They believe at least two or three were involved, he said.

"We'll stay as long as we can to make sure the public feels as safe as we can make them feel living in Alaska," he said.

A Fish and Game representative arrived in Chignik Lake late Thursday to inspect the kill site and to find out about recent wolf behavior in the area, including how many there are, spokeswoman Jennifer Yuhas said in an e-mail.

"Local residents report nightly sightings of wolves in the area," Yuhas said. "It was determined that any wolves at or near the fatality site are to be considered an immediate threat to human safety. We are attempting to obtain biological samples of wolves in the area and to identify the offenders."

Local hunters began tracking the wolves earlier in the week and have had several sightings, but as of Thursday afternoon hadn't made any kills, said 24-year-old Jacob Kalmakoff, who was among those who found Berner's body. Hunters were planning to try baiting them with meat to get a good shot, he said.

"Right behind my house is where I'm going to put some," Kalmakoff said. "I can look behind my house and see up on top of the hill where they're been climbing up the hill and looking down at the village."

In the wake of the attack, local residents reported they were not traveling alone and children were being accompanied to school.

"I think folks are now processing what we all need to do as residents of this area where there are a lot of wolves to be sure that everybody is safe," said Rick Luthi, the chief operating officer for the school district who is in King Salmon. "Our children have a great deal of freedom, and this is going to cause folks to be sure that children are safe."

Friends were holding a memorial service for Berner Thursday evening in Perryville, where she was based, he said.

Bob Berner said is daughter was enjoying Alaska, doing what she wanted to do, and that he's had many years of great memories with her. The attack didn't change his perception of wolves, he said.

"They're just doing what wolves do," Berner said. "Their nature happened to kill my daughter, but I don't have any anger towards wolves."

Find James Halpin online at adn.com/contact/jhalpin or call him at 257-4589.

Troopers statement

Here's the text of the statement issued Thursday by the Alaska State Troopers regarding the cause of death of a teacher in Chignik Lake.

(CHIGNIK LAKE, Alaska) -- Investigation has determined that Candice Berner's death was non-criminal in nature. An autopsy conducted today confirmed Ms. Berner died from injuries sustained in an animal attack. According to the State Medical Examiner, the manner of death is "accidental" and the cause of death is "multiple injuries due to animal mauling". After conferring with state biologists and the community of Chignik Lake, it has been concluded that the animals most likely responsible for the attack are wolves. The Alaska State Troopers' (AST) death investigation regarding this incident is closed.

AST is providing assistance to the Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) as it addresses public safety concerns regarding wolf activity close to the community of Chignik Lake under the ADF&G Commissioner's statutory authority. A trooper pilot and an R-44 helicopter are en route to Chignik Lake to assist Fish and Game efforts. Barring any weather or logistical issues, a trooper, as well as a representative from ADF&G, will attend a public meeting in Chignik Lake tonight to address ongoing response efforts and concerns of local residents.



Chignik Lake's history with wolves takes dark turn

by Jackie Bartz
Sunday, March 13, 2010

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Chignik Lake residents are trying to pick up the pieces after state troopers say a wolf pack killed a teacher in the area last week, but bad weather is still delaying plans to kill the pack.

While the residents of Chignik Lake live side-by-side with wildlife, they're now doing everything they can to keep people safe.

A chilly wind whipped through the Southwest Alaska village's empty streets and abandoned playground Saturday -- but it's not the howling wind that's keeping residents inside.

"I don't mess with the wolves," said resident Sam Stepenoff. "They're pretty vicious, and they'll tear you up."

Wolves are intertwined with Chignik Lake, visible in the local school's basketball-court logo and in a school sign. But now this town mascot is a symbol villagers want to get rid of.

"It's a bad dream you can't wake up from," said resident Virginia Aleck. "It's -- it's something that I never heard of before, and it's happening in our village."

Biologists blame an area wolf pack for the death of 32-year-old Candice Berner, who walked the local school's halls as a special education teacher.

"She -- there are just people in life that have an impact fast, and Candice was one of those folks," said Rick Luthi with the Lake and Peninsula Borough School District. "She came here in August, she embraced the lifestyle out here. She took advantage for the opportunities for experiencing not only the outdoors, but the cultures in our villages."

Biologists say wolves attacked Berner during an afternoon jog. Villagers discovered her body about two miles outside of town.

"I told some of the teachers to be careful out there," Aleck said. "The road down to the landing is long, and if you're alone you're more vulnerable -- and I told them they've got to be careful."

Villagers call Chignik Lake a town haunted by wolves.

"We were taught that they were evil, that we couldn't look at them in the eyes because their eyes are always fiery," Aleck said. "And we couldn't be near them, we couldn't even talk about them hardly if they were around. We had to be home."

Residents say that it's not uncommon to see wolves in town. In fact there are signs of them almost daily, such tracks in people's yards or stray dogs that go missing.

"Wolves will take advantage of any opportunity they are presented with," said Alaska Department of Fish and Game biologist Lem Butler. "They do come into towns frequently, and we hear about sightings of wolves in communities throughout this area each winter."

Chignik Lake residents are determined to keep their community safe. No one walks alone, and rifles now ride shotgun in vehicles.

"I think Candice would feel very warmed at heart to see how the community has come together and supported each other," Luthi said. "And, you know, what we will do to provide for greater safety and what we'll do, those will be determined."

Fish and Game plans to kill the entire pack, but villagers don't want to stop there. They want more education for incoming teachers, and a wolf awareness program in the school.

"Man, I really feel bad about that," Stepenoff said. "It's too bad, she was just starting, you know? She was just pretty young, and I couldn't imagine how the parents feel."

Candice Berner's parents lost a daughter, and the children of Chignik Lake lost a teacher. But villagers say they will never forget Berner, or the lessons she taught both in and out of the classroom.

"We'll have to take things one day at a time, and hopefully -- our kids will never forget this, I know," Aleck said.

Butler says he hopes to begin hunting the wolves Monday or Tuesday, but it all depends on the weather.

Contact Jackie Bartz at [email protected]
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

Thanks 45.308 for chiming in-I've was going to pop off about some of the comments here, but you set them straight IMO. On my 5th decade up here, lived in the bush and viewed wolves from afar with no close encounters-I've seen some giants that would make a German Shepard look like a Pekingese-I will add 2 things about this
1. Classic case of no situational awareness by victim as I believe she liked to jog w/headphones.
2. Hunger can cause unusual behavior from any animal-look at hunger stories concerning humans-I had a lynx, one of nature's most secretive creatures, walk down my driveway in broad daylight, in front of 3 talking adults with a running snowmachine next to them, and attempt to get into our poultry pen in late winter. Hunger driven!
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

You know I appreciate the perspective from the folks living up there. I think it albeit ignorant of me to express an opinion I truly don't know anything about with regards to locale.

I am sympathetic to the woes of those that see the devastation the wolves create on wildlife in their respective areas. And I believe wholeheartedly that their expansion should be controlled.

I was all but heartbroken when I made a hunt in Alberta and found out the area I was in had no wolf tags.

Just think if we treated the scumballs that commit brutal murders with the same mentality we do a predator animal that kills, we might not have as bad a crime problem as we do.

Regardless of the circumstances surrounding the incident, someone lost a daughter.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

Why is it that some people expect that they can go anywhere on earth, unprotected, and have a right to safety? In areas such as Alaskan wilderness, there are species of large, carnivorous animals that have existed since long before humans have. To these animals, humans are just another form of prey. If a human goes into an area where these types of animals live, and takes no responsibility for protecting their own safety, they may be attacked, they may be injured, crippled or killed, and they may be eaten (sometimes even while still alive). This does not make the wolves bad. They are just doing what wolves do. If you are going to run, hike, etc. in such places, take precautions. Carry a gun. And pay attention to your surroundings. If you allow wolves to approach you without noticing them, even a gun will be of no use to you.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: tigerhawk</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Why is it that some people expect that they can go anywhere on earth, unprotected, and have a right to safety? </div></div>

Exactly. Let me illustrate a similar example. I live in Florida. We are infested with gators. They are everywhere, in people's swimming pools, shallow rivers, creeks etc. If i took my dumb ass in the florida everglades and just decided to swim because i like to swim and i got eaten by a gator, what happens then? Should we control the gator population now and start killing them? Hell no. That is what they do.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

When folks moved West, they knew about the wolves. That's why they killed them all.

Now, the wolves are coming back. As they regain their original numbers, they regain their confidence.

Expect to hear about more of these events.

Greg
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

Fish and Game ends search for wolves in Chignik Lakeby Ashton Goodell
Wednesday, March 17, 2010

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Fish and Game ended its search Wednesday for wolves that attacked and killed a jogger in Chignik Lake, but some people in the village say it's too early to call it off.

Biologists did a final sweep of the area Wednesday afternoon looking for the animals.

Monday night Fish and Game killed two wolves believed to be part of the attack.

Some in the village say they are still scared and they worry that the wolves will come back into the village.

"They are trying really hard to see if they can find any more wolves, and of course we are going to be worried. But everybody will try to get rid of the wolves that do come back into the village, more than likely, I hope so," said Don Lind, a member of the Village Tribal Council.

The Fish and Game crew was planning to leave Wednesday, depending on the weather.

If people in the village report more sightings, Fish and Game says it will do a secondary search for the pack in a couple of weeks.

Contact Ashton Goodell at [email protected]


State suspends hunt for wolves that killed village teacher

2 KILLED: State feels it got pair involved in fatal attack on woman.

Anchorage Daily News

Published: March 18th, 2010 07:46 AM
Last Modified: March 18th, 2010 07:47 AM

The state is calling off its search for more Chignik Lake-area wolves that might have been involved in last week's attack that killed a school teacher.

Alaska Department of Fish and Game staff killed two wolves Monday about five miles west of Chignik Lake.

Fish and Game biologist Lem Butler said Wednesday he believes it's "highly likely that these wolves killed Candice Berner," the 32-year-old special-education teacher who had been based in Perryville.

"After conducting a two-day search for other wolf signs and finding none, I also conclude that there is a low likelihood of finding additional wolves in the near future if the search is continued," Butler said.

The department said its staff "will remain in close contact with local residents to monitor wolf sightings and activities in the Chignik Lake area, and may conduct a second search of the area in early April if further action is warranted."

Butler concluded the wolves killed Monday were involved in Berner's death because witnesses said there were two sets of wolf tracks on the road where Berner had been jogging when the attack occurred, and because the two wolves seen that evening matched the descriptions of the wolves killed this week.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

Idiots who honestly think a wolf would not kill a human need to clean the shit they call a brain out from between their ears. I recommend something in a 45 cal.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

This thread is making the hair stand up on the back of my neck.
I guide brown bear hunters out of Chignik Lake, have been for 8 years. Gonna be back up there in May
I'm pretty sure I sat next to this woman on the plane the last time I was out there. I remember she was , young and a teacher at the school.
The wolves around Chignik Lake have eaten all the caribou and most of the moose. They are so hungry we see them wading the salmon streams in the fall looking for fish carcasses that the bears have missed. We've shot some of them in the past, I'll make sure we shoot all the wolves we can from now on.
I live in Idaho where the canadian gray wolves were re-introduced by the federal gov't about 15 years ago. The wolves down here have killed most of the elk and are working to wipe out the deer. Last winter rural ranchers reported sighting wolves around their kid's school bus stop.
 
Re: Alaska wolves 'kill' woman's teacher out jogging

This is why carrying a fire arm on you when jogging is a good idea, Such as a compact 45 or 40 cal. Like it was said, its been 50 year since an attack like this, and the best reason to carry is to protect yourself from crazy people, (especially women protecting themselves against sexual predators). If more people would carry it would make people think twice before committing a crime.

This is tragic, my condolences to the family.