Saturday

Louise Gray reviews Land of the Lost Wolves on BBC One.

In Washington state in the US, wolves were driven to extinction 70 years ago but against the odds they are coming back across the border from Canada. Land of the Lost Wolves (BBC One) explored the love/hate relationship between the locals and these beautiful animals.

While biologists are hoping this marks a comeback for the wolf in the western states, with the territory they use spreading as far south as Mexico over the next few decades, hunters are twitching their triggers. Ranchers claimed the wolves threaten their grandchildren as well as their livestock and are ready to “shoot, shovel and shut up” – even though it is illegal to kill one.

The film would have made particularly fascinating viewing for animal lovers in Scotland, where there are serious suggestions that wolves should be reintroduced in the Highlands.

Gordon Buchanan, the Scottish wildlife film-maker, is more than aware of the problems. Here, he was shown shocking pictures of skinned wolves and interviewed angry cowboys in a saloon bar. But really he is on the side of the conservationists and the viewer was swept along in the excitement of finding the “pioneer” pack leading the recolonisation of the Cascade Mountains.

Biologists claim that wolves help keep the ecosystem in balance by stopping deer from overgrazing. “The Cascade Mountains without wolves is like the Serengeti without lions,” one said.

Buchanan, still a wildlife documentary heart throb despite cutting off those gorgeous curls, set up a “robo wolf”, sprayed wolf urine on trees and even attempted a rather feeble howl in his efforts to capture the wolves on film. He trekked through the snow and got so hot running alongside the husky sled he had to remove his thermal underpants.

The best footage was from the cameras hidden in the woods as the wily wolves manage to evade the humans while leaving intriguing signs of their presence. As we learned more about the intelligence and history of these creatures, you began to wonder who was watching who.

Wildlife documentaries today have to do more than show us our favourite animals, as biologists try to work out how they will survive in the future.

The story of the wolves in America is particularly intriguing as an example of our wider struggle to protect wild creatures in the modern world while living alongside them.

The end result was better than any book or cartoon, with the added bonus that we can carry on watching this story in real life to see what happens next.

SOURCE

VIDEO Land Of The Lost Wolves - Ep1




At a time when wildlife is disappearing across the planet, one animal is making a comeback - the wolf.
Wolves were wiped out across much of America, with more than a million wolves estimated to have been shot, poisoned or trapped when European settlers arrived.
This enthralling series documents the return of one very special wolf pack to the snowy peaks of Washington's Cascade Mountains - the first to return to the American Northwest in 70 years. By BBC

VIDEO Land Of The Lost Wolves - Ep2



After spending four weeks camping out in the bitterly cold Cascade Mountains, wildlife cameraman Gordon Buchanan and a team of wolf experts discover that most of the pack have been killed by locals who live by the motto "shoot, shovel and shut up". But have any of the pack escaped unharmed? As the team chase exciting new leads, there is a glimmer of hope on the horizon. By BBC

Responses to "Land of the Lost Wolves (BBC Movie -Video)"

  1. "shoot, shovel and shut up", hmmm I have heard that before, the 3 S's usually used by Militia members and RW crazies.
    I really wish these idiots WOULD be "raptured" up so we can fix the mess they have made and protect the animals that need protecting.
    "If the devil had a animal it would be the wolf" ummm no! If there WAS a devil...YOU and your minions serve him!
    The wolves are so undeserving of all this extreme hate?
    Why do they hate them so? B/c they show a model of what man "should" be?
    Loyal, family member, pack member, community member? Always seeking the "Greater good" for the pack?
    Man runs around seeking the "greater good" for himself!

  2. So amazing to see the reverence for nature from Gordon & Jasmine and the rest of the crew vs the "Hunters & Ranchers" who only "love" animals they can hunt, and funny they say the wolves kill inhumanely? How would they kill without their guns, traps, arrows & knives?
    The wolves are only using the tools they have? Also if they don't eat the whole kill other animals will. They only take what they need.
    And it irks me, that many of these ranchers graze their herds on BLM lands...OUR LANDS! And I say if they can't get along with wolves on OUR land then don't graze them there.
    This is a wonderful documentary, with the exception of the few Asshats that were questioned and say they will kill the wolves.

  3. SheWolf says:

    Long live the Wolf!!! White Wolf thank you for sharing these programs--I have one thing to say to Ron Gillete--you should check your facts Ron when you accuse the wolf of being the most vicious cruel predator of North America --I believe Man holds that title all by himself.

  4. SheWolf says:

    Long live the Wolf!!! White Wolf thank you for sharing these programs--I have one thing to say to Ron Gillete--you should check your facts Ron when you accuse the wolf of being the most vicious cruel predator of North America --I believe Man holds that title all by himself.

  5. Anonymous says:

    I don't understand how wolf hunters can say ' wolves are not good for the eco system' what utter rubbish,!! it has worked for thousands of years before white settlers arrived and started to eradicate them, besides these so called sportsmen are just greedy killers in my eyes. we have wolves in Europe but they don't seem to face the same hatred as in the states.

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