Our only wolf sighting, North Coast Trail, Vancouver Island
Here is a short video of a wolf on the beach, Nissan Bight, in Cape Scott Park on Vancouver Island.
We, my daughter and I, were hiking the North Coast trail and we were walking on Nissan Bight in the middle of the day when this wolf comes trotting
down the beach towards us.
We had just left some other hikers a few minutes prior that were finishing up their trip and they said they had not seen hardly any wildlife, which is
crazy if you spend any time there.
The wolf was heading the same way the hikers were and at the end of the beach the trail, and the hikers, went left into the woods while the wolf went
right towards the point and into the forest.
So understand dont waste your time always searching for those wasted years
face up and make your stand and realize that your living in the golden years
Thanks Folks, I was surprised at the size of it. Much larger then I expected.
That fact that it passed within 40 or 50 feet of our setup camp was also a little shocking
We were going to be sleeping in that nylon wrapper for the next week and wolves and bears (a bear walked passed an previous camp site even closer the
day before) and they had no problem being right next to them.
Look up Sea Wolves, They basically use the coastal range from Vancouver island north up thru SE Alaska, Salmon, Mussels, Clams are the main diet.
You had special encounter.
my first thought upon seeing a wolf (raccoon, skunk, coyote ect) walking toward people, especially in daylight, is rabies.
[Edited on 2-28-2019 by pacificobob]
His 'attitude' seemed a little too relaxed and he appeared to travel as far away as possible given the confines of the ocean.
It appears that wild animals react to people differently based on hunting pressure.
Raccoons and skunks are major sources of rabies but again their response to people also depends on their level of harassment by humans,and if they
appear focused on me or appear aggressive it is time to take some protective action.
I have had raccoons try to steal food from me from 5 feet away while hiking the Olympic Coast in Washington. Of course they are used to hikers being
sources of food.
The bears on Vancouver Island also seemed unconcerned around people for the most part which is very unsettling when one is on the beach in front of
you and it isn't moving off into the forest.
some animals will adapt to human contact and loose fear by repeated exposure. i lived in alaska 30 years and every time i saw a wolf (remarkably few
times given the areas i hung out in) he was in a big hurry to be somewhere else. they seemed most comfortable when several miles away from us. bears
and fox were quick to acclimate to human contact.
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