Colorado must choose between wolves and cows

I wrote a piece last year firmly supporting the reintroduction of wolves into Colorado to share the mountain landscape with cattle ranchers. I’ve changed my mind.

My reasoning at the time was that wolves are part of the natural landscape here. They help the huge deer and elk herds by taking the old and weak out for dinner.

As a lifelong hiker and mountaineer, I also liked the mere idea of having wolves in the Colorado mountains even if I never saw one (and I never have). After all, they’d been here for millions of years until they were eradicated in the 20th century.

As for wolves’ occasional predation on cattle, well, that’s the price to pay. Under the reintroduction program, ranchers get compensated for those predations.

But there’s a problem, which I should have recognized back when I wrote that piece.

Wolves are like other predators. They look for easy meals. For a wolf, there’s no easier meal than a calf.

That’s because domesticated cows in a wild setting are not equipped to fend off an attack on a young calf. Cows are big, to be sure – bigger than a deer and often bigger than an elk – but they lack both antlers and speed.

Moreover, a calf has a distinctive scent which attracts predators. In contrast, elk and deer fawns are born with very little scent, and their mothers ordinarily lick them spotless immediately after they are born. Deer and elk usually eat the placenta after giving birth. That, too, lessens the scent around the birth site. Cows out in a forest also do that sometimes, but less often.

Fawns naturally hide in-place in shrubbery and tall grass. Their natural coloration makes them very hard to spot, and their lack of scent makes them very hard to smell. And fawns make for a smaller meal than a calf.

If I were a wolf, I’d go after calves, not fawns. Calves are easier to find, easier to kill, and make for a bigger meal – enough for not only me but also my packmates, some of whom helped me by distracting the cow while I took the calf.

It’s impossible to teach wolves not to kill calves. What are you going to do? Smack them with a rolled-up newspaper each time they kill a calf?

The Colorado state agency responsible for the wolf reintroduction program has made a hash of it. They reintroduced the wrong wolves into the wrong areas at the wrong times. In at least one case, they violated their own written policy by reintroducing particular wolves who were known to be cattle predators. We now have more calves killed than wolves reintroduced.

Maybe a more competent agency with more competent professionals would have done a better job, but I doubt it. Managing the reintroduction of predators into a mountainous cattle ranching environment is a tall order for a few government employees

The end result is this. We have to decide between cows and wolves. In my mind, that decision is not an easy one. Here are some considerations.

First, there’s the tribal consideration. The conservative tribe generally chooses the cows. That’s mainly because liberal tribe chooses the wolves. The liberal tribe chooses the wolves because – you guessed it! – the conservative tribe chooses the cows.

If you’re tribally conservative – or tribally liberal – then read no further. You already have the information you need to make this decision.

The rest of us will want to consider some other factors. It’s true that wolves were a natural part of the Colorado mountains for millions of years. The importance of that fact, however, will depend on your personal aesthetics. It’s also true that malaria has been a natural part of Africa for millions of years, but nobody thinks we ought to preserve it for millions more.

It’s equally true that cattle ranching in the Colorado mountains has a colorful history going back almost two centuries. I don’t particularly like cows (though I do eat them once in a while) but I kinda like their owners, namely the cowboys and cowgirls. You could even say that cowboys and girls are my favorite sort of pickup drivers (but that’s a very low bar).

There are considerations of economics. If we don’t have cows eating grass on the National Forests of Colorado, then where on earth will they?

Texas. A little research suggests that the role of the Colorado National Forests is very small in economic terms. The cumulative “cow-days” of ranching in Colorado National Forests is maybe a few percent of the “cow-days” attributable to the enormous private ranches of Texas. Taking the cows out of Cow-lorado would have no effect on the price of hamburgers.

That’s no surprise. The terrain, climate and acreage of the Colorado mountains is far less hospitable to cows than the grasslands of Texas – even if the grass in Colorado is free because it’s growing on the public lands of the National Forests.

In any event, nearly all cattle from everywhere eventually get sent to feed lots in places like Kansas where they get fattened up for a few months with grain, and then slaughtered.

People sometimes complain that these feedlots are inhumane to the cows. I’ve never been to one, but I can imagine that’s probably true. The slaughtering part in particular sounds bad, but I doubt it’s as bad as being eaten alive by a wolf pack.

On a broader point, one school of thought holds that eating animals, at least sentient animals, is morally wrong.

For me, that’s a hard question. Eating animals is clearly natural, for people have been doing that for as long as there’ve been people. But people have also been murdering one another for as long as there’ve been people (see, e.g., Abel and Cain) and that doesn’t make it morally right.

Where do you draw the line? It’s easy to say that eating dogs is wrong, and it’s a short step to say the same about pigs and cows. But what about deer and elk? Is it wrong for us to eat deer and elk but right for wolves to?

What about eating frogs? What about insects? What about mushrooms and cheese mold? What about apples and pears?

I admit that I don’t like what cows do to my National Forests. Their sheer size is rough on the landscape, muddies the hiking trails, and tramples the small trees.

That’s a small point, I suppose, in comparison to the livelihood of a family that has been cattle ranching for four generations, but it’s still a point. I pay taxes, and those National Forests are partly mine and I own some of that free grass the cows are eating. (OK, it’s not exactly free, since the ranchers pay nominal grazing fees for National Forest access.)

I won’t tell you how I come out on all this after having reconsidered it – whether we should choose the cows or the wolves. It’s largely a matter of competing values and aesthetics. Your opinion is as good as mine.

But I’ll say this: It doesn’t work to have both cows and wolves in the Colorado mountains. Let’s choose wisely.

Colorado wolves are casualties in the culture wars

Wolves roamed Colorado for millions of years. At the end of the last ice age, they managed to survive the mass extinctions of megafauna such as mammoths, mastodons, sabertooth tigers, giant cave bears, and huge sloths, an extinction event that was probably caused in part by the arrival of humans from Asia at about the same time.

Until the much later arrival of Europeans, those early Americans were living in the stone age. Their weapons were stone-tipped spears and arrows. They didn’t even have horses. But they hunted in a way that was deadly to large herding animals and the predators of the herds: They used fire.

Don’t believe the myth that they killed only whatever they could eat. They didn’t eat all the six-ton wooly mammoths, believe me.

The truth is that they killed as humans are known to kill: They killed only whatever they could

The wolves survived those humans and their fires. As large-ish mammals go, wolves are smart. Pack hunting involves a lot of socialization, planning, communication, hierarchy, and cooperation.

If you think you and a pack of friends could bring down a moose with your bare hands, try it sometime. And you weigh much more than a wolf.  

It wasn’t until Europeans arrived just a few centuries ago with firearms, poison traps, and the intention to raise cattle and sheep on the open range, that humans succeeded in exterminating wolves in Colorado.

Even then, it took a while. The last wild wolf was seen in Colorado as late as the mid-1940s. The last known wild grizzly bear in Colorado was not killed until 1979. Mountain lions never went extinct in Colorado, and now there are about 4,000 of them here.

To some of the people who spent their lives hiking, climbing, adventuring, and growing up in Colorado, the absence of wolves seemed a pity, an upsetting of the age-old natural order.

I’m in that group.

Apart from sentimentality, there’s a biology issue. Biologists say that the absence of wolves has produced huge destructive herds of their natural prey – elk. The elk overgraze the grasslands, leaving it prone to erosion. Ironically, this is to the detriment of the grazing cattle and sheep for whose benefit the wolves were eliminated.

More elk are now in Colorado – over a quarter million – than in any other state, including Alaska, Montana and Wyoming.

That surprised me. For animals that can weigh nearly half a ton and stand tall as a man, these Wapiti – or “ghosts of the forest” – are very shy. In a long lifetime of hiking thousands of miles of the Colorado backcountry, I’ve seen them fewer than a couple dozen times.

I may not see elk often, but I may finally be granted my wish to dance with wolves. A citizens’ referendum a few years ago put to the people the question whether wolves should be reintroduced in Colorado. It passed.

It hasn’t been hard to find wolves for the reintroduction task. They never went extinct in most of the west, including Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, Washington, California, Arizona, Alberta and British Columbia. They’re also in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota.  

The Colorado referendum provided that ranchers would be compensated fairly for the livestock the wolves prey upon. Nobody in their right mind believed that wouldn’t happen.

And it has. We now have about 30 reintroduced wolves in Colorado, and they kill a few dozen cattle and sheep a year.

Let’s put those numbers in context. Those 30 wolves are less than 1% of the 4,000 mountain lions. In case you’re worried about being eaten, wolf attacks on humans are practically non-existent, while mountain lion attacks on humans, labradoodles and other semi-intelligent domesticates occur with some regularity.

Those 30 Colorado wolves are about 0.001% of the 2.6 million cattle here. Colorado cows outnumber wolves by nearly 100,000 to 1.

The few dozen wolf predations on livestock don’t compare to the thousands of cattle and sheep lost to winter weather, lost to collisions with cars, and sometimes just plain lost – or stolen – on the wide-open range of National Forest lands where ranchers lease grazing rights on the cheap.

At the rate wolves are eating Colorado cattle, it would take them approximately a quarter million years to finish dinner – but dinner has a life span of only about 18 months.

I know those figures are cold comfort to a dead cow preyed upon by a wild wolf. But being dead and eaten is the fate of that cow anyway, right?

As for the cow’s owner, the taxpayer money paid as compensation to ranchers for wolf predation is generous.

As for the taxpayers who pay that compensation, even at generous rates it doesn’t amount to much because it happens so seldom. The total is only something in the low to mid-six figures a year. That’s roughly a nickel per year per Colorado resident.

I’m happy to pay my nickel. If the nickel is a sore spot with you, I’ll pay yours too.

Apart from the dollars, cents and sense at issue here, the debate over wolf reintroduction rages emotionally. I’ve noticed a certain tribal aspect to it. It’s my tribe – conservatives – who tend to be opposed to wolf reintroduction, while it’s the opposing tribe – liberals – who support it.

I’m not sure why. Teddy Roosevelt was both a conservative of sorts and a conservationist who was instrumental in protecting Yellowstone and the wildlife there. I’m certain he would support wolf reintroduction to Colorado.

Nonetheless, the range war goes on, Hatfield and McCoy style. Somehow, somewhere along the way, wolves got thrown to the wolf-bin of environmental issues – that grab bag of global warming, wind power and plastic straws. The more one side supports it, the more the other side opposes it.

Wolves have become collateral damage in the culture wars. People on each side, who don’t know or care much about the substance of the issue, bark and howl at their counterparts on the other side.

To my tribe of conservatives, wolves are equated with globalist transexuals in fur coats who are after their children. To the opposing tribe of liberals, wolves are seen as sacred angels of Gaia.

Both are wrong and destructive. The wolves deserve better than to be tools in this ridiculous culture war that they didn’t start, don’t fight, and can’t win.

And we deserve better. Forget about Gaia. We conservatives and conservationists deserve a God-given land with the natural creatures He put there. We conservatives would do well to conserve well.

Glenn Beaton has lived over 60 years in Colorado, has climbed 50 of the Colorado 14ers, and is a former Full Member of Mountain Rescue Aspen.