Iowa wolf

kirby

New member
Dropped my wife off @ her friends rural house last pm. Picked her up @ 12:05am. On the way home driving slowly on a gravel road. A dusky Black wolf, quickly crossed the road 50' or so in front of us.

I slowed down quick, seen it step through a barbed fence. Wolf kept it's eye on me. I about crapped when I realized what it was. Looked to be around 30" high @ the shoulder[compared to a ditch fence post]. Guess it's weight 85-100 lbs. It was awesome to see.
 
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It was on a beaten down deer trail on the hard snow trail. Location is, 1.5 miles SouEast of Marshalltown, Iowa. Went back this am, to hopefully get some pics of it's track. Couldn't confirm any, snow was very hard with many tracks.
 
I'm new to yote hunting...but two weekends ago...I went to DesMoines to a work convention at the Marriot. I have a friend that I stayed with in Dallas County (N. of DM about 35-40 minutes) He hooked me up with some private land approx. 1 hour NW of DesMoines to try and call in a yote. I arrived late with only about 45 minutes of daylight left...and it was EXTREMELY windy. So I hiked in 1/4 mile and sat upwind to get anything in the timber to hear my cries. I was decked out in my snow camo (naturalgear) sitting in some prairie grass about 200 yds from the timber...There were deer all around me...the closest being only about 150 yds upwind behind me. I squalled on the calls for about 1/2 hour...and in the last few minutes of daylight (i could almost no longer see) I thought I saw something on the edge of the timber. I stared at it for awhile..and concluded it was a young doe, and continued scanning the timber line. I looked back toward the doe...and it was gone. That was strange I thought...so I hit the rabbit distress LOUD. BOOM...out popped the doe...HOLY #$*& it's not a doe...BUT IT'S HUGE. Starring right at me 300 yds. I have to swing the bipod on my DPMS to my right to try and get the crosshairs lined up...but if I do...I'm busted. Literally only minutes of light left...and I can barely see thru the scope anyway...so I try. BUSTED...back into the timber it goes. I walked over to see the tracks and they were huge!!! I'm not sure what it was...wolf? Who knows...I'm too new to this to make any claims...but I've been hunting wildlife long enough to know that I don't think it was a yote. Who knows? But it was large enough to mistake it for a small doe, and I was too far from any residences to be domestic. If only I woulda brought the camera to photo the prints.
 
I have seen some pretty big wolf-dogs in my area. I know of a few people that have a mix of a wolf and a dog for a pet. It does not seem like that big of a stretch for one to be turned loose, or to have escaped. Some of these look exactly like wolves.
 
The IA DNR has been tracking the wolf packs that move south during the winter from Wisconsin. Every year they seem to move farther south. They have been found as south as Dubuque.
 
Here is a little artical to read, I don't remember how long ago it was .

Booger



Michigan Wolf Killed in Missouri

The list of animals you can see in Missouri continues to grow. A Grundy County man, returning from bowhunting for deer Oct. 23, spied what he thought was a coyote peering into his sheep pen. Fearing for the safety of his livestock, he shot and killed the animal. Then he discovered the "coyote" was wearing an ear tag and a radio collar. Realizing he had killed a wolf, he did the right thing and brought the carcass to a conservation agent.

Conservation Department. Furbearer Biologist Dave Hamilton later verified that it was a gray wolf and traced it back to Michigan, where it had been marked and its movements tracked as part of the Michigan Department of Natural Resources' wolf management program.

Also known as timber wolves, gray wolves once lived in Missouri. They were extirpated here and elsewhere in the eastern United States by the end of the 19th century. Timber wolves persisted in Minnesota. From there, they dispersed back into Wisconsin and Michigan, which now have wolf populations of their own.

The wolf killed here was a 2 1/2-year-old male weighing 80 pounds. Michigan biologists tracked it for nine months after capturing and tagging it in July 1999. After that, biologists lost track of the animal. Now they know why. It was on a 600-mile road trip.

The gray wolf is classified as federally endangered in Michigan, Wisconsin and Missouri. However, the species has grown numerous enough in Minnesota that it is considered threatened there, and federal officials are considering downgrading its status to threatened in other states. This would allow more flexibility in managing gray wolves when they cause problems for people. The man who shot the wolf here will not be prosecuted because he was protecting his livestock and reasonably assumed the animal was a coyote.

"For years, we have believed and told people that there were no wild wolves in Missouri," said Hamilton. "We can't say that anymore, though the likelihood of seeing a wolf here still is extremely small."

Hamilton said the Conservation Department has never stocked wolves and has no plans to restore them to Missouri. He said the state lacks wilderness areas large enough to sustain wolves without unacceptable human conflicts.
 
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Michigan Wolf Killed in Missouri




Yeah, I remember reading that article. That took place only about 40 miles from where I live. There has also been mountain lions in MO for several years now so I guess you never know what you'll see out in the wild anymore!
 
This is the 3rd [single]Grey wolf I've seen, since 1964. I've seen a couple other canines, that were highly suspect[viewed from afar].
Very large/heavy frame, with long legs. Two of them looked coyote. But were way to large, even for a large coyote.

The recent pic I have in the photo forum [3/4 mile coyote].
Is a coyote?, I'm not 100% sure of. Mainly because of it's size. From tip of it's snout, to end of it's rump. Took up 2.5 corn rows, standing broadside. No way can that be [all] coyote IMO.
 
just the other day i was reading an article written by ISU, on coytote's in iowa. now if i may digress a moment, im from wyoming born and raised and new to iowa. i must say that from what ive seen iowa coyotes are not just a little bit,...but damn bigger than wyo coyotes. so back to your topic. when i cut hay this spring i had some round bales out in the alphalfa field and you know how tall one of those are (about say 5 and one half feet) i was leaving for work in the early am when i see a coyote standing right next to one of my bales. i kid you not its back was level with the middle of the bale. so i started reading up and this article said that through gene reasearch isu has determined that a bloodline from wolfs in canada has bred its way down into iowa and parts of missouri, the longer legs make them mor addept to deep snows that are typical to iowa winters.

last week my brother spotted a coyote of my back pourch that he said was definatly yote but it was quote "kind of black\" if im able to kill one of these i will post a pic.

awsome topic
 
Interesting info guys.

PineCone,

Guessing, I would say yes same animal. The wolf I seen up close. Looked identical to the 3/4 mile coyote? in size & color. I told a few friends of mine. The 3/4 mile coyote, very well could've been a wolf. When I got out of my truck & looked @ it's[3/4 mile coyote] track a few days ago. It was a lot larger than the coyote tracks around here.

Distance; Around 8 miles apart.
 
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