The
idea of reintroducing wolves to Scotland and Wales has been mooted…
Iberian wolf
Until the 1900s the Iberian wolf inhabited the majority of the Iberian Peninsula. Franco’s government started an extermination campaign during the 1950s and 1960s that wiped out the animals from all of Spain except the north-western part of the country, where there is still a fairsized population in Sierra de la Culebra.
Today, the hunting of wolves is banned in Portugal but allowed in some parts of Spain. There are reports of wolves returning to Navarre and the Basque Country and to the provinces of Extremadura, Madrid and Guadalajara. A male wolf was found recently in Catalonia, where the last native wolf was killed in 1929; however, this animal was found to be an Italian wolf (Canis lupus italicus) migrating from France! Tourists everywhere...
The Spanish wolf figures in my short story ‘Cry Wolf’ featured in Spanish
Eye, 22 cases from Leon Cazador, 'in his own words'. Here is an excerpt:
Fernando Lopez
was what you would call, in English, a poacher turned gamekeeper. A cunning
rather than a clever man, he had been a hunter of wolves—a lobero—for many
years, learning the tracking skills from his father and his father before him.
When I was
fifteen, our parents brought us to stay in Spain for almost a year. “Family
problems,” Mother said. And during that time, my brother Juan and I often left
Pilar behind and went into the mountains to track wild animals and bring home a
brace of rabbits. During one of these escapades, we stumbled upon
forty-year-old Fernando who was setting a trap to catch a lone wolf. That was
thirty years ago. Wolf traps are now illegal.
Fernando was
taciturn but somehow we three got along. Perhaps our youthful enthusiasm and
respect for his lore was appreciated. Anyway, he asked us to join him on a wolf
hunt the following week. Although we knew we would have to concoct some
innocuous story for our mother to cover our absence, we couldn’t miss this
opportunity, so we agreed. Our friendship grew from that time on.
Thirty years
ago, the wolf was regarded as a pest. “The wolf must be exterminated as its
continued existence is a blemish on our standing in the civilised world,” the
mayor of Fernando’s town had declared. “Spain appears to be a Third World
country. We must get rid of the wolf plagues, as Britain and France have done,
so we can be civilised.”
The government
of the day offered bounties for dead wolves and even supplied strychnine to
landowners and the peasants who worked the land. It would be interesting to
find out whether the incidence of new widows and widowers increased from this
period.
- Spanish Eye, p74
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Wild animals are mysterious and fascinating. They kill each other with no guilt or regret, and they don’t think twice about killing humans. Still I don’t believe in traps so I’m glad that’s becoming illegal. Then there’s the controversy over us moving into their territory. Is it really theirs, our those of the fittest? And the controversy goes on. As always, interesting subject, Nik.
ReplyDeleteEveryone here in Wyoming seems to have a strong opinion one way or the other on the reintroduction of the wolf. Ranchers hate them and tourists love them. Hunters are mixed, some think they kill too many big game animals others like them because they want to hunt them. I would like to get a nice photo of one, guess that almost makes me a tourist in my own state. Nice post!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the comment, Neil. Here in Spain they do tend to control the numbers of wild boar, which can be troublesome too. The consensus is that the wolves aid 'biodiversity' and affect the ecosystem in beneficial ways. They may even affect the aspen tree in Yellowstone! (See http://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/episodes/in-the-valley-of-the-wolves/reintroduction-of-the-wolves/213/
ReplyDeleteThanks, Kathleen. Yes, the controversy will go on, but so it seems will the spread of these magnificent dangerous creatures.
ReplyDelete