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WESTERN ROUNDUP
- February 17, 1997
A tragic blend of wild and domestic
by Ron Baird

Wolf-dog hybrids at play. Steve Groer/Rocky
Mountain News
Rowdy," born in a cage at a Texas roadside circus and sold as a
wolf-hybrid
pup to a 10-year-old boy in Colorado, used his mouth the way people use
their hands. As he grew larger, Rowdy would drag the boy around his pen
by
an arm or a leg. It was all in good fun, but then the boy went away for
a
few weeks. When he returned, Rowdy was eager to play rough; this time
the
boy became frightened.
His alarm fired Rowdy's predator instinct, and the boy's resulting
injuries
required 72 stitches. Rowdy was caged in a Texas oil field for a year
before
his owner brought him to Mission: Wolf, a refuge in southern Colorado
for
these difficult hybrids.
Rowdy's story illustrates the unpredictable behavior of wolf-dogs and
the
problems people may run into when they try to make them into family
pets,
says Kent Weber, Mission: Wolf's founder.
Now, two recent attacks - one which left a woman dead in the Colorado
Springs area - plus a couple of earlier maulings of children, have
spurred
the Colorado Legislature to look at wolf hybrids and perhaps come up
with
restrictions on them. Ten states ban the wolf-dogs.
But it is likely the Legislature will learn that any generalization
about
wolf hybrids is probably wrong. Its task will be further complicated by
the
fact that it is virtually impossible to determine whether a hybrid truly
has
any wolf blood.
"If you put your beagle in a blender and look at its DNA, you couldn't
tell
it from a wolf," says Ed Bangs, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
wolf-recovery director for Montana and Idaho. "Your dog - genetically
speaking - is a wolf."
In relative terms, wolf-dogs are not a threat. The Humane Society of the
United States has estimated that wolf-dogs kill an average of one child
every two years: Bangs says that about 200,000 people seek medical
attention
each year for dog bites, and about 20 people are killed. Animal-control
experts say German shepherds are responsible for the most attacks on
humans.
"Yet, when a wolf-dog hybrid attacks someone, it becomes a big deal,"
Bangs
says.
Which isn't to say there is no problem with wolf-dog hybrids, as Rowdy's
story illustrates. Remixing the wild animals with their domestic
relatives
creates a volatile brew, most experts agree. Unlike wolves, dogs don't
fear
humans. And, unlike wolves, dogs allow humans to dominate them.
"We've taught dogs and bred dogs to attack and kill dogs, and to attack
and
kill people," says Weber. "Wild wolves just don't behave this way. But
when
you combine the aggressiveness of a dog with the strength and
independence
of a wolf, that's when you get a time bomb."
Wolf-dogs are hot items in the pet market, in states where they're
legal.
But the buyer never knows what - if any - percentage of his new purchase
is
wolf. The slanted, mysterious eyes might just come from Alaskan husky
genes.
The higher the reputed percentage of wolf, the more marketable the
animal.
"It's the old elbow-in-the-rib and wink routine," Bangs says. "(The
breeders) tell the buyer, "We say it's 50 percent, but it's really 95
percent (wolf)." It's just a marketing strategy."
Most wolf-dog experts say they are baffled by the desire to own a
wolf-dog.
They're not good pets and can never be chained up, says George
Stapleton, a
staffer with Candy Kitchen Rescue Ranch in New Mexico.
"Everybody wants a piece of the wild," he says. But when buyers get what
they think they want - a high-percentage wolf hybrid - they also get a
passel of problems, he says.
"People will pay as much as $1,500 for a pup," says Darlene Kobobel, of
the
Wolf Hybrid Rescue Center in Lake George, Colo. "But by the time it's
reached maturity, around a year old, they are desperate to get rid of
it."
Wolf hybrids tear up furniture and yards; they cannot be housebroken;
they
are extremely rough with children; and they kill small pets.
A minimum facility to take decent care of a high-percentage hybrid is a
one-acre lot with an eight-foot fence, Stapleton says. The animals that
have
less than that often wind up at a pound or animal shelter, where they
are
euthanized. Due to liability, few animal shelters will allow a wolf-dog
to
be adopted. Around four-fifths of hybrid pups will be dead by the time
they'
re 3 years old.
Instead of taking a troublesome pet to the pound, Bangs says, some
owners
try to release it into the wild. "Those animals usually die a slow death
by
starvation, get run over or are killed by other predators, even by
wolves."
Tamer animals often end up hanging around remote homes looking for human
contact and food, Bangs adds, and these are often shot.
Since wolf-dogs are not accepted into established wolf packs, they
present
no problem to established recovery efforts, Bangs says. But Weber fears
the
attention given to wolf-dog attacks on humans has hurt Colorado's
chances
for wolf restoration, because people have heard that "wolves killed the
woman."
While many experts recognize the special nature of these animals, few
say
owning one is a good idea.
"I do not recommend hybrids as pets," says Bangs. "The constraints of
pethood are particularly unfair to high-percentage hybrids: Keeping wild
animals under captive conditions is inhumane."
* Ron Baird
For information about wolves and wolf hybrids, contact the Wolf Hybrid
Rescue Center, P.O. Box 212, Lake George, CO 80827 (719/748-8683);
Mission:Wolf, P.O. Box 211, Silver Cliff, CO 81829 (719/746-2919); Candy
Kitchen Rescue Ranch, Star Route 2, Box 28, Ramah, NM 87321
(505/775-3304.)
Ron Baird writes about environmental issues for the Colorado Daily in
Boulder, Colorado.
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