How to hunt Wolves?

Beendare

WKR
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May 6, 2014
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Corripe cervisiam
Given 2 scenarios; one being a rifle hunt in the fall season [before snow].....and the other being winter conditions....what strategies can a guy use to kill a wolf?

It seems to me setting up on a good observation point covering one of their travel routes in early season would be a decent strategy especially early AM and right up to dark.

Calling, Howling?

Has anyone tried dragging a deer leg or scent drag type of thing?

I'm a bowhunter and the only guys I know that have shot a wolf with a bow did it off of a moose carcass.

Late season it seems like guys use snow machines to cover a lot of ground.

Let er rip on effective strategies for a guy to kill a wolf with a rifle.....
 

mxgsfmdpx

WKR
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Oct 22, 2019
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Scouting and Prep
· Wolves can be patterned like other game. Scouting will help you find travel routes, crossings, etc.
· Use a good spotting scope and spend more time glassing your hunt area.
· Wolves tend to travel the easy routes. Watch roads, trails, frozen lakes, etc.
· Be prepared to shoot accurately at long distances and at moving targets up close.
· I hunt in thick country and prefer to hunt with a shotgun and buckshot.
· Hire an outfitter!
· Wolves are where the game is. If there are hooved animals in your area, you 're likely to have wolves, too.
· Many hunters won't shoot a wolf when they're close to elk and deer. Need to change that mindset. Go on more hunts specifically for wolves, not for wolves as a byproduct of another hunt. (Questionnaire data reveal that only 11 percent of respondents hunted exclusively for wolves; most hunted for wolves as part of a deer or elk hunt.)
· Get permission from private landowners. Last year I hunted Forest Service land but kept seeing wolves lower on private ground. Lots of landowners are happy to have wolf hunters. Could lead to other hunting opportunities down the road.
· Check with ranchers, loggers and others who spend time in the backcountry. Ask them about the wolf activity they're seeing.
· Start driving roads and howling to locate packs well before sunrise.
· Carry a pistol while bowhunting (where legal) so you have some firepower in case you see a wolf.
· Most wolf hunters want to shoot a big trophy male. But taking females is better for population control. The main thing is just don't shoot a collared wolf. We need those collars to track the packs and funding for collaring wolves is getting tighter.

Hunting Strategies
· Be hunting at first light and hunt through the last light of day. Lots of wolf activity is early and late.
· We had luck with howling. The wolves came right to us. But there are many other wolf vocalizations too.
· Howling works to locate wolves. But too much howling, especially by inexperienced callers, is educating wolves in our area.
· Elk-calf-in-distress, fawn-in-distress and coyote calls work well.
· I called in wolves using a bull elk bugle and cow calls.
· Next year, we're planning to try moose calls.
· Dont over-call.
· When calling, be sure to set-up on high ground, not in a hole or depression. Visibility is a key.
I hunted wolves for 42 days before I got one. I tracked a pack into an area, sat at a crossing and called. Really enjoyed the experience.
· Cover lots of ground until you find a concentration of sign. We followed fresh wolf tracks through the snow until we found the pack holed up in a patch of trees.
· I found tracking difficult. Even when you're on fresh tracks, you might still be miles behind the pack. Better off to get somewhere and wait.
· I think a driving technique with a group of hunters, such as that used for deer in some areas, would work for wolves.
· Watch for birds magpies, gray jays, ravens and vultures as a tipoff to fresh kill locations. Approach carefully and then watch the area for returning wolves.
· An effective hunting technique for us was finding a fresh wolf kill and watching the area from a tree stand.
· Considering using a blind. Wolves seem to spot blaze orange from a great distance.
· Watch gutpile and carcass areas where hunters have taken deer and elk, especially late in the season when wolves are following game herds down from the high country and are attracted to the scent of blood.
· Don't hunt for wolves like you do for elk. Hunt as if you were hunting for another elk hunter. Anticipate differently. Don't ask yourself what would an elk do in this situation, but rather what would an elk hunter do in this situation.
· Wolves are more reckless in their pursuit of prey when it's colder outside. Hunters should concentrate on bad weather days for wolf hunting.
· Go deeper. Wolves are less wary and easier to hunt in the more remote areas.
· Too much pressure and wolves will go nocturnal.
· Hunt smart and be patient. And go with a companion who can watch your back.
· Once you kill a wolf, stay put. Other wolves from the pack will often return to the site, sometimes very quickly. You or a buddy may get a chance at a second wolf.

General Observations
· Wolves in our area are surprisingly unafraid of people or human scent.
· In our area, cover scent is important. I've had passing wolves pick up my scent when passing elk didn't. Once they get downwind, they're gone.
· Hunters need more info about how to completely, and safely, utilize a wolf carcass: meat, hide and skull.
· Would like to see good prices offered by fur buyers.
· In my area, the elk are nearly gone and the wolves have moved on.
· Elk behavior has changed. Wolves have made elk less likely to graze in the open. Bulls hang out more in the rougher country, thicker timber and are less mobile and vocal during the rut. We see a lot fewer cows with calves.
· In our area, elk are more skittish and quieter now. They run in smaller groups rather than the big herds we used to see. They spend more time on lower-elevation private property where I cannot access them. More elk in the low country means more elk along the highways. Increasing roadkill might be related to wolves. My experience in Alaska taught me that trapping, not hunting, is a much more effective means of killing wolves.

-Some solid information from the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation.
 

VernAK

WKR
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IMO, wolves can be the most difficult North American trophy to hunt by accepted hunting methods. Most are shot while hunting some other specie. Most of the guided wolf hunts are usually a long wait over a bait pile. To take a purposely hunted wolf with archery gear is a real challenge and may involve many years.

I have called them into rifle range but I've also screwed up several times.

Good Luck!
 

mxgsfmdpx

WKR
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IMO, wolves can be the most difficult North American trophy to hunt by accepted hunting methods. Most are shot while hunting some other specie. Most of the guided wolf hunts are usually a long wait over a bait pile. To take a purposely hunted wolf with archery gear is a real challenge and may involve many years.

I have called them into rifle range but I've also screwed up several times.

Good Luck!

There’s the problem right there. Hunting wolves as a byproduct of other hunting if far too common. Talk to the guys up in Northern Minnesota, Manitoba, and Alaska... It’s trapping over hunting all day. You want to successfully kill wolves. Trap them.
 
Joined
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I spot and stalked them one fall in the Brooks Range. I'd listen for them to howl or spot them, and work my way to get in front of them as they were moving. The first one I stalked, I ended up missing at 50 yards. The second pack I stalked I was able to get in front of them moving along a trail that would bring them near a pinch point with timber and a pond. The lead wolf came by me at 40 yards and I was able to make good on the shot. Over the past few years we have had several opportunities at wolves by doing our best to get in front of where they may be headed, wind in your favor. I don't think this same tactic would work in heavily timbered country, but it's one way to do it. 137246

Stan Parkerson's fall Grizzly bear clients routinely get opportunities at wolves within bow range as they move up and down salmon streams. I believe he said that over 40% of his clients are able to have archery shots at them. That's pretty incredible.
 
Joined
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UT
I spot and stalked them one fall in the Brooks Range. I'd listen for them to howl or spot them, and work my way to get in front of them as they were moving. The first one I stalked, I ended up missing at 50 yards. The second pack I stalked I was able to get in front of them moving along a trail that would bring them near a pinch point with timber and a pond. The lead wolf came by me at 40 yards and I was able to make good on the shot. Over the past few years we have had several opportunities at wolves by doing our best to get in front of where they may be headed, wind in your favor. I don't think this same tactic would work in heavily timbered country, but it's one way to do it. View attachment 137246

Stan Parkerson's fall Grizzly bear clients routinely get opportunities at wolves within bow range as they move up and down salmon streams. I believe he said that over 40% of his clients are able to have archery shots at them. That's pretty incredible.
That's hard core man I like it.
 
Joined
Mar 17, 2019
Messages
328
Location
Stevens County, WA
IMO, wolves can be the most difficult North American trophy to hunt by accepted hunting methods. Most are shot while hunting some other specie. Most of the guided wolf hunts are usually a long wait over a bait pile. To take a purposely hunted wolf with archery gear is a real challenge and may involve many years.

I have called them into rifle range but I've also screwed up several times.

Good Luck!
How many times have you called them in? Ill be heading to idaho to try wolf calling next month, and im curious how long youve called to get them coming in?
 

VernAK

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Delta Jct, Alaska
How many times have you called them in? Ill be heading to idaho to try wolf calling next month, and im curious how long youve called to get them coming in?


My predator hunting buddies usually come up in October when we have some daylight and before trappers get too serious. We use the usual sounds that one would use for coyotes and we go for a half hour.

Opportunities are few unless you can find recent kills or gutpiles to hold em in the area.

This year we made our second set when our third member could see three wolves approaching rapidly up a side trail unknown to the rest of us. At the same time a coyote approached us and we shot it....game over.
 

NoWiser

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I listened to this guy’s pack howling all night. Set up close and used a combination of fawn-in-distress calls and coyote yips. He ran in and I shot him at 5 yards. He weighed 120 pounds on a certified scale. I had to carry him out a mile, as Minnesota required the entire carcass, guts and all, to be checked in.
 
Joined
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Wow, 120 lbs is a big one. Thats insane they require the whole carcass, guts and all. What a stupid unnecessary burden! Sounds like something they do to discourage people from filling wolf tags.
 
Joined
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328
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Stevens County, WA
View attachment 138301

I listened to this guy’s pack howling all night. Set up close and used a combination of fawn-in-distress calls and coyote yips. He ran in and I shot him at 5 yards. He weighed 120 pounds on a certified scale. I had to carry him out a mile, as Minnesota required the entire carcass, guts and all, to be checked in.

So how long were you calling before he came in?
 

BearGuy

FNG
Joined
Jun 12, 2019
Messages
69
Location
Montana
I spot and stalked them one fall in the Brooks Range. I'd listen for them to howl or spot them, and work my way to get in front of them as they were moving. The first one I stalked, I ended up missing at 50 yards. The second pack I stalked I was able to get in front of them moving along a trail that would bring them near a pinch point with timber and a pond. The lead wolf came by me at 40 yards and I was able to make good on the shot. Over the past few years we have had several opportunities at wolves by doing our best to get in front of where they may be headed, wind in your favor. I don't think this same tactic would work in heavily timbered country, but it's one way to do it. View attachment 137246

Stan Parkerson's fall Grizzly bear clients routinely get opportunities at wolves within bow range as they move up and down salmon streams. I believe he said that over 40% of his clients are able to have archery shots at them. That's pretty incredible.
That’s crazy you’ve had multiple successful spot and stalks. Good on you.
 

LG1

FNG
Joined
Dec 18, 2018
Messages
15
Location
Idaho
View attachment 138301

I listened to this guy’s pack howling all night. Set up close and used a combination of fawn-in-distress calls and coyote yips. He ran in and I shot him at 5 yards. He weighed 120 pounds on a certified scale. I had to carry him out a mile, as Minnesota required the entire carcass, guts and all, to be checked in.
Nice !
 
Joined
Jun 3, 2018
Messages
874
Location
North Carolina
sent you a PM with some how to info:

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MBAlex

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 17, 2022
Messages
188
@weekender7 can you send me the same PM? Have had success once this year over bait but would like to call one in before the season ends
 

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