|  |     The following is a list of the wolves at Wolf Haven.  Some of them have 
    descriptions.
    
    Destiny - she has been at Wolf Haven since 1985 when she was three 
    months old.  As a pup she was beautiful; as an adult she is 
    magnificent, with black and silver coat.  She is the darkest wolf of 
    those we shelter.  She can be aloof and illusive, and remains somewhat 
    hard to get to know for strangers.  She was born in captivity during 
    the spring of 1985.  Mother Nature may gave gotten confused when she 
    created Destiny - the heart of a wolf, the quickness of a gazelle.  
    This she-wolf is fast, fast, fast.  Being the "older woman" now, she 
    takes great pleasure in keeping Moose in line and being his companion.
    
    Moose - came to Wolf Haven as a pup from Wolf Park in Indiana where he 
    was born.  His official name, Alces, comes from the scientific name for 
    the moose, the animal he would have hunted had he been born in the 
    wild.  He is an unusually large wolf, with long legs and a lean, lanky 
    body.  His coat is many shades of tan, brown and black.  He enjoys 
    attention from people and frequently greets the staff by standing on 
    his hind legs and putting his front paws on the fence making himself 
    taller than any of his visitors.
    
    Windsong - is an adult female Buffalo Wolf.  She is a rather famous 
    wolf, having done everything from schools, fairs, and Rotary Clubs to 
    being on the Today Show.  She was the adopted "aunt" to five young 
    wolves when they lived right next to her.  When they were pups, she 
    would get very upset if it appeared someone or thing might harm the 
    pups in any way.  She taught her human companions to treat the pups 
    with the utmost care, respect and love, just as the pack does for all 
    their pups.
    
    Tahoma - is a a young adult female Timber Wolf.  She was named after 
    the Native American word for what we now call Mt. Rainier.  In her 
    teenage phase, she was a real rebel, her philosophy was to do what she 
    wanted to do with whichever of the Wolf Haven staff was visiting her.  
    She loved to eat shoelaces, shoes, shirts and the like.  Now a little 
    older, she is very excited over human companionship, and treats humans 
    in a very loving, playful manner.
    
    Little John - is an adult male Timber Wolf.  His three sisters are 
    Morning Star, Kiowa and Cris.  He is a truly beautiful animal, 
    majestic, healthy and strong; the proud leader of this pack.  He was 
    named after Little John in Robin Hood; the result of a children's 
    contest.  Though he is sometimes a little timid around strangers, he 
    has developed those strong bonds with those that he has spent some time 
    with.  John participate in a field ecology class to help 
    representatives from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and U.S. Forest 
    Service.
    
    Lucan - is an adult Tundra Wolf.  He and his mate, Clementine, were 
    sheltered in a small private zoo.  In the owner's will he decreed that 
    on his demise the wolves would go to Wolf Haven.  He had a great 
    respect for Wolf Haven and felt that was the only place which could 
    care properly for them.
    
    The rest of the wolves are:
    
    Hambone		Rogue	       Bullet	      Homer
    Sung		Kiwi	       Smokey	      Onyx
    Princess Lilypad	Nehani	       Nero	      Gyrene		   
    Nakomis		Jason	       Colorado	      Kathleen
    Noah		Nimrod	       Sybil	      Teddybear
    Hurricane		Kiowa	       Jeremiah	      Gris Gris
    Morning Star	Cris	       Araby	      Shasta
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|  |                               HOW HIGH THE PRICE?
            AN ADMIRER OF WOLVES ASSESSES THE COST OF HER DEVOTION
    
    
    When I was about seventeen years old, I decided to get a wild pet.  I 
    settled on a wolf, I think because of my particular interest in dogs.  
    I found very little literature about wolves, but I read everything I 
    could get my hands on, and none of it spoke against keeping them as 
    pets.  I came away realizing there was really very little known about 
    wolves, an much of what was "known" was, in fact, only assumed.  There 
    began to be more purpose behind my dream.  It would be a lifetime 
    commitment, to learn all I could and to share what I learned.  It was a 
    bigger responsibility that I ever dreamed.
    
    So I knew what I wanted before I got Bonnie.  I wanted her, first of 
    all, to really know she was a wolf, so I arranged not to pick her up 
    from the zoo until she had opened her eyes and lived with her family 
    for a time.  I intended to raise her on my parent's farm, to socialize 
    her to the chickens, horses, dogs, and numerous cats.  It never 
    occurred to me she might not be just another member of the family, like 
    the dogs were.
    
    What I got was an infant creature that knew beyond a doubt that she was 
    a wolf, that I was not, and that I was directly responsible for 
    removing her from her rightful family!  That first night home, she 
    mourn-howled incessantly on the vast linoleum kitchen floor; but she 
    also knew that a seventeen-pound tom cat was easy prey for a wolf cub 
    that was all of twenty days old (and weighed perhaps four pounds, so 
    she bowled him over and attempted to disembowel him on the spot.  On 
    the second night, when she was three weeks old, I offered her some 
    cooked liver from my plate "to see if wolves liked cooked meat."  The 
    next moment, she had climbed up my leg like a cat, braced her back 
    against my chest, and arrived in my plate, gobbling everything on it 
    with terrible growls!  The family was in shock.  In the following days, 
    she began to dominate me, her little body rigid as she "rode up" on 
    whatever part of me was available, with fierce growls responding to 
    every one of my moves.  Worried, I contacted the zookeeper, some dog 
    trainers, and a malamute breeder, wanting to know how to proceed.  
    Their collective advice was to "treat her like a mother wolf would, 
    pick her up by the scruff and shake her, throttle her, growl 
    ferociously, make her know you're the boss!  There was no else to call, 
    no books to read, and obviously I had to do something, so I took their 
    advice.  What happened was that the small wolf that had begun to trust 
    me saw that I was not to be trusted, that I was unreasonably violent, 
    and was to be avoided at all costs.  Instead of submission and love I 
    got mistrust and defiance.  So I did an about-face and let things 
    revert to the way they had been.  Bonnie happily dominated me for the 
    rest of her life.
    
    By the time she was six months old, it became very obvious that she was 
    going to be very selective about whom she liked, whether they were 
    family members or not.  During her third year, she became seriously 
    aggressive to unfamiliar dogs on her outings.  It became impossible to 
    take her out by myself since she was so strong I could not hold her 
    back, even though I was more than double her weight.  On the last 
    occasion I did take her out alone, two foolish and unleashed Dobermans 
    approached us down the beach.  Bonnie gleefully dragged me toward the 
    battle, an my only recourse was to head out to deep water, where she 
    swam strong circles around me with her head, hackles, and tail high 
    above the water, roaring all the while.  The Doberman's owners, 
    eventually seeming to sense there was something not quite right, loaded 
    up their dogs and left.  Finally, her future as an ambassador wolf was 
    not bright.  Children always make her act like a big bad wolf, and she 
    was suspicious of adult strangers.
    
    So there I was, with a maturing wolf that fit none of the roles I had 
    laid out so nicely for her.  I found myself in the position so many 
    disillusioned exotic-pet owners reach, stuck with the prospect of 
    keeping for life a wolf animal that was costly, assertive, dangerous, 
    and destructive and, although friendly to me within limits, not at all 
    a "pet".  It was unthinkable to destroy or get rid of Bonnie.  We had 
    grown very close.  I had learned many lessons during my friendship with 
    her.  I knew now that wolves, regardless of birthplace, are as wild as 
    the storm blowing over the mountains, that they are undeniably 
    formidable predators, and that they are not suitable as pets!  I felt 
    bad about having gotten a wolf for a pet in the first place and wanted 
    to do something to help keep other wolves out of the nightmare of pet 
    situations.
    
    So what did I do?  I launched into a wolf-hybrid breeding program that 
    was to span a number of year and more lives than I care to place on 
    this paper.  At least two wolf-wise friends advised against this 
    venture, one out of hard-learned compassion, the other out of concern 
    for the reputation of wolves and the safety of children.  But I 
    believed I could do better than the dark scenarios they forecast.  What 
    follows is only a small portion of my experience as a wolf-hybrid 
    breeder.
    
    My intention was to find a mate for Bonnie that could produce pups that 
    were very wolflike in appearance, so they would satisfy the urge to 
    have an exotic pet, yet also very doglike in temperament, and therefore 
    suitable as pets.  He must be able to produce hybrid pups that were 
    "safe" pets, since I knew no that wolves were not.  At last I found 
    him.  Togiak was one of the sweetest, gentlest Alaskan malamutes I've 
    ever met, as well as an AKC champion with an excellent background.  I 
    felt certain this distinguished dog would leave his desirable genetic 
    stamp on a litter of first-generation wolf hybrids.  Of the five 
    resulting exquisite pups, one male was very wolflike and wild.  After 
    his new owner took him, he was never heard from again and could not be 
    traced.  One female, which I kept and of whose sweet nature I never 
    had a doubt, was also exceptionally wolflike.  Sadly, she figured out 
    how to climb over the overhang on the wolf pen and was killed on the 
    highway.  About the remaining three I expect you to form your own 
    judgments.  Alfie failed in her first home as a pet, turning terribly 
    shy by three months of age.  Her second home lasted only until she 
    began nipping at her owner's legs when he cleaned the pen.  Her third 
    home lasted a full year.  She lived with Arrow, a 
    three-quarters-wolf-male that had been rescued but was too shy to 
    touch, as was she.  They made a happy couple.  But, one day while the 
    family was gardening, the baby toddled over to the shy animals 
    unnoticed.  Alphie grabbed him through the wire and shredded his arm.  
    One hundred stitches on a soft, tiny arm.  Alphie was killed.  I could 
    only fault her owners for not having a safety fence to keep the child 
    away.
    
    Storm was big, soft, and beautiful, and his human family was wonderful.  
    He enjoyed free run of a large yard, got lots of house time, and played 
    gently with the children.  But the owners never built the maximum 
    security pen I made them promise to build, and, as luck would have it, 
    Storm turned out to be one of those hybrids that did everything in the 
    book.  He jumped over, then ripped through the fence to play with the 
    neighbor's dog.  He ignored "hot" wires.  When his owner chained him as 
    a last resort, he ate not one but two holes in the family's (rented) 
    house large enough to admit him.  His second home was in a large, 
    wolf-proof, L-shaped kennel with a pure wolf companion.  The entire 
    yard was enclosed in six-foot chain link, but neighbors were over for a 
    barbecue within the yard, and their unattended child was climbing the 
    kennel fence, when Storm grabbed him and severely mangled his leg.  
    Storm was spared the bullet and given to a breeder.  He lived for 
    eleven years and sired hundreds of puppies.  What are their stories?  
    Blue was the most dog-like of the litter but, from the age of three 
    weeks, his temperament was cold steel.  At nine months, I knew beyond 
    doubt that he was dangerous to children.  When he was a year into his 
    life, people were often terrified of him - even though he was securely 
    penned: his defiant stance and cold, pale yellow stare could make your 
    skin crawl.  More than one person advised me to destroy him before 
    "something happens."
    
    Destroy my Blue?  Never!  But, during his third year, he began to 
    threaten me when I spent daily time in the wolf pen.  He was second 
    ranking in a group of seven other wolves and hybrids.  My husband, Dan, 
    was worried about me going in while he was at work.  Finally Blue 
    fought, beat, and nearly killed the alpha Diamond.  With Blue as alpha, 
    I could never enter the pen again, and I knew he would shortly finish 
    off the ever gentle Diamond.  I shot him as he stared down at me from 
    the highest platform, this new throne.  When I entered the pen to 
    remove his, finally "safe" body, the wolves were all gentle and mellow.  
    It seemed they had expected this.
    
    It wasn't Togiak's fault.  It wasn't Bonnie's fault.  It was mine, for 
    selling wolf-hybrid time bombs to people who refused to believe the 
    warning I steadfastly sewed into each sale.  I was so picky in 
    selecting the right homes!  I was so careful to educate prospective 
    buyers about what they were getting, or might be getting!  But even as 
    I chose this huggy-soft malamute sire, I guess I new deep inside he 
    couldn't do magic.  There is no such thing as a "safe" animal to cross 
    with a wolf.  The wolf is first and foremost a formidable predator, and 
    if not even thousands of years of domestication have made him 
    thoroughly safe (as evidence by the many unsafe dogs we all have 
    known), how can anyone expect to undo in one generation, or several, 
    what nature spent millions perfecting.
    
    My career as a breeder came to a close.  More often than not, I now 
    voice a strong opinion about hybrids not being suitable pets and try to 
    convince other breeders to see the tragedy their programs are causing.  
    I have kept my own animals all these years (Bonnie died just shy of 
    sixteen years) but not without price.  After seeing all the trials and 
    tragedy we imposed on the wolves, and they imposed on us, friends and 
    family members made it clear they felt we were foolish to drag around 
    "those animals."  Finding a home where you may keep them is not easy, 
    whether renting or buying.  Every place we lived with the wolves and 
    hybrids, and, I regret to say, there were many, we had neighbor 
    trouble.  Wolves cause suspicion in neighbors, whether they are next 
    door in town or twenty miles down the mountain and just happen to own a 
    wilderness parcel near yours!  Permits to keep the wolves do not 
    protect you from neighbors who are either unnerved by the presence of 
    wolves in the area or object to their singing.  We were called onto 
    defend the wolves in court, in public hearings, and in the local 
    newspaper.  They were accused of howling (true), getting loose and 
    wreaking havoc (false), causing chickens a mile away to die of fright 
    (false), and of causing the bears, mountain lions, and golden eagles to 
    leave the vicinity (preposterous)!
    
    Finally, in 1982, I came to work at the Folsom City Zoo, a small zoo in 
    Northern California which houses a number of non-releasable North 
    American native animals and, notably, discarded wild-animal pets.  Here 
    I have been witness to the tragic stories of countless unfortunate 
    wild-animal pets.  My experience with wolves and hybrids and, now, the 
    zoo, has led me to realize the majority of exotic pets (and here I 
    include hybrids) are dead before they reach the age of three.  
    Frequently we receive requests for information about how to handle a 
    difficult situation with a wolf hybrid.  More often it is a desperate 
    plea for a home for an animal that has turned out to be nothing like 
    the owner expected, more like a wild animal than he/she is prepared to 
    handle, and a big problem the owners need to unload.  The zoo now has a 
    permanent exhibit of wolf hybrids as an educational public service.  
    Signs on the exhibit tell the true, and unhappy, stories of the hybrids 
    within and stress the serious drawbacks of such animals as pets.  I 
    know the strategy helps, but it reaches so few, and most of those it 
    does reach believe, as I did, that they can do it better.
    
    The strongest and most painful lessons I have learned are the ones I am 
    most grateful for.  Now I know the far-reaching responsibilities one 
    assumes when one "owns" an animal, especially a wild one, and I am 
    committed to sharing that knowledge for the good of people and animals 
    alike.  Mine is a personal hell, for not only do I have many regrets 
    about what I have done, but often the animals I must turn away to an 
    uncertain future are, in fact, descendants of pups I once sold.  I am 
    directly responsible for their tragedies, but the only atonement I can 
    offer is in speaking out against the animals I so dearly love.
    
    **********************************************************************
    Terry Jenkins, her husband, Dan, and daughters Lena and Mary Ruth live 
    in California with a number of animals, including two mustangs and a 
    dwindling pack of wolves and hybrids.  At the Folsom City Zoo she 
    concentrates on improving the animals' living conditions and developing 
    the zoo's credo, "Animals are not disposable."  The Jenkins also own 
    Walking Wolf, a business producing animal-oriented art, embossed 
    stationary and jewelry.
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