Even if Mike Tyson had a broken arm, I think all of us would still show him the amount of "respect" these Coyotes showed this lone injured Wolf. They harassed him, but knew that even with his broken leg, he was still dangerous enough to kill or seriously wound them. They played it safe by going ahead and letting him eat in peace. He was by himself so wasn't going to eat much, and there was enough of this big carcass left for the Coyotes to come back to.
So true animals are amazing at optimizing- cost/benefit- if the Coyotes hadn’t fed it would have been a different story though I would still bet on the wolf’s ability to fight through pain and the coyote’s natural alignment to the hierarchy
You are right Blake - many a coyotes have been killed by wolves. A wolf bite could kill but worse it could injure the coyote to the point it can’t feed itself. For every predator self preservation comes first. You have to be able to fight another day.
Thanks so much - Jennifer and Darryle, I am creating and sharing much more. Recording and editing takes tons of time. I really do appreciate the comments and support.
Come on guys of course it’s a wolf. You can clearly see the difference smh. You all keep asking a million times..you do not have to be an expert to see it’s a wolf.
He's definitely got spunk, if he wasn't injured that would have been his meal no problem hope his left get better and he doesn't get an infection due to a break and hope he can scavenge enough to make it through... I'm from Casper n always love seeing the Wyoming wildlife we are blessed with thrive
Great film. Gotta love and enjoy wildlife while we still have it. Noticed the wolf looking straight at the camera several times while feeding. Yote's didn't seem to notice it...Thanks for sharing the video !
this wolf was most likely injured trying to pull down a elk. he was starving and decided to risk his life to eat. he will bulk up weight eating and possibly help heal a sprain. if it's broken his future is grim if he encounters a pack of wolves from unknown pack. wishing him fast healing. 🙏
How long did the wolf feed? Did it leave the carcass or was it chased off? It would be great if we could follow the wolve's activities and see what happens to it. Can a wolf recover from such an injury? I suspect it cannot.
Rachel - glad to see you are back on the channel. This is great feedback and I will keep this in mind to have done a follow-up. Can a wolf recover from this? I am sure some people will say yes and other will say no. Of course it depends on the severity of the injury, which none of us know but over the years I would say 30% of the time they can overcome a limping injury. About 70% of the time they don't and continue to be lame for a long period of time. Those that survive but are lame do end up with much short life spans and sometimes challenged by other wolves if it were a dominant wolf. This wold did spend 15 mins feeding and I should have posted that note in the video. I have been shortening that because some folks are sensitive to those images and I didn't want to create a channel with a lot of gore. He did get a full belly before leaving so he added a few days to his life to recover. Best, Ron
Good question. It is what I thought when the video finished. How long did the wolf feed?. Thanks to Yellowstone video for the response. I saw a video of a wolf with three legs. And he was fat like a ballon. So i hope the beautiful protagonist of this video be able to survive long and healthy.
@@Yellowstonewolves and people are sensitive to reality being censored or being inaccurately depicted for any reason, as this creates a distortion of reality. Whatcha gonna do when we come for you??
@@juangp632 I saw with my own eyes a coy-wolf who got along quite well for years on 3 legs. I don't remember which leg, but completely missing, so not as serious an injury as the wolf in this case. A coy-wolf is a cross between a (eastern red)wolf and a coyote.
@@goatamongsheep4296 Thanks a lot !!. After your commentary i am surer that the protagonist of this video is walking through the woods, healthy like an apple. I wish it.
So true. Thank you so much for watching and commenting. Please join the “Wildlife Support Team” by subscribing to the channel if you can, much more to come and I so appreciate your support. - Best, Ron
Great teamwork that the coyotes had displayed. Some of them would distract the wolf and the others would take a bite out of its tail to ensure that the wolf wouldn’t touch their food.
I hope it's leg or foot heals, tough animals time is often a good healer, hopefully with the help from its pack this wolf will recover 😇 All the best mate 🏵️🌱🏵️
Was this wolve likely alone when he was injured? I'm curious how injured wolves fare in their packs when they are injured. I know wolves have a hierarchy and a family like structure so do injured wolves remain with their pack or do they fall behind and eventually fend for themselves? Than you for the video.
Yes, "mother" nature is a cruel one, from the human sentimental sight. In reality "she" is perfectly neutral. I would like to be able not to feel pity for the lost ones...
Great vid! New to the channel and love it! I was surprised you didn't show the wolf eating considering it's just part of nature and this is a wildlife channel. I read you started to take some of that type of footage out of the vids bc some people are sensitive. lol?? Def appreciate your footage! Thanks!
Yea I am trying to strike a balance about showing nature but not being too gory about. A lot of times when I am watching it can be hard to see but I get it, it is the circle of life. On this one I didn't put enough in and many thought he/she didn't get to eat. Thank you so much for the comment too. So much appreciated. Best, Ron
I just posted a new video ua-cam.com/video/ZFPtRxkZ-0E/v-deo.html "The War Continues" this time Wolf-vs-Grizzly this one was fun to watch so I shortened it down for others to watch in a reasonable amount of time. Thank you again for commenting too!
It’s interesting how God created this amazing food chain. It’s just sad when It’s an injured animal or a baby becomes dinner👺. By the way, these videos are wonderful
I've seen 3 legged dogs adapt well to life. Of course they didn't have to hunt for their food but some of them were still loose dogs on the street and got into fights. When his paw heals as well as it will, he should have a chance to make it. He's going to have to do a lot of scavenging unless he has a pack to once again return to.
@@Yellowstonewolves cool. We spoke on the phone last year I believe. I’m still working as the Bear ambassador for the Forest service again this season. I’m also doing a lot of livestreams on my UA-cam channel.
Are these animals just used to you being close by? They look right at you and don't seem fazed at all. Amazing video btw. I am a wolf lover for sure, but I also love coyotes. Anything dog like lol. Of course in a showdown I would always be team wolf 🐺
I love your comment - I am huge dog lover too. I wish I could take one of the wolf pups home but I think they are much better off in the park left alone. I would say a lot of the animals are very wary of people but not always afraid as long as people stay in the spots they expect them to be. I would say the biggest thing when watching them is for people to stay quiet. I always want to watch them do what they will and not create anything that will influence it otherwise. Please do join the team and subscribe. Best, Ron
Looks like a full grown wolf?? If it's injured that badly I'm guessing it won't be able to join a pack or much less even keep up with one.. You can kind of sense the desperate grit from the wolf taking chances like that, who knows how long it couldn't eat due to its injuries. Really curious how an apex predator got itself into that situation. Thanks for the video
Chris injuries in the park can happen from all kinds of ways. It seems that a big reason for leg injuries is running and having a leg land in a hole dug by a badger, ground squirrel etc. I have seen pronghorns, bison, wolves all wander around with injured legs. I have not see these types of injuries in bears or elk. Thank you so much for watching and commenting. Please join the “Wildlife Support Team” by subscribing to the channel if you can, much more to come and I so appreciate your support. - Best, Ron
Wolves don't really "join a pack". What they do is find a mate and start a pack, their pack mates are their children/siblings. Occasionally a pack will allow a distantly related wolf to join them, but it's relatively rare.
Id like to know how big the elk horn was that was laying there on the ground you see just the tines in one of the parts where the wolf is defending itself
Hi Brandon - I will go and check the footage. I will post a pic of on the communities tab of the channel. I did just post an Elk rack picture I took this spring. Was one of the largest I had ever found. Did this for you. Please do subscribe if you can. Best, Ron
Not likely. But there have been wolves that recover with a limp and make another year or so. They resort to scavenging because they just can’t hunt. A few years ago there was a female hurt the male mate did some killing for the two. She might have had a litter they we preparing for is something, not sure.
Hi Mike some have said it was part of the Junction Butte pack but I didn't see it around the den again. I am looking at my footage to see if that wolf was there on any of my recordings. I am still working on it. Best, Ron
I understand and share this human sentimental reaction, but as far as I know, the rangers are not supposed to intervene in any of the natural processes. It's for good reasons.
@@claudiakiel4944 I strongly disagree with that. It is the same logic they used when they said humans should not stop wildfires and the fires grew and made huge damages. Humans cannot keep getting selective responsibilities. the wolves were re-introduced tot he park by humans after having been killed by humans..
@@giogiogio333 As far as I know - I live in Germany - it's about intervening in the destiny of individuals, nothing to do with wildfires which btw are manmade.
@@claudiakiel4944 the 'euro-vision' naturally concedes any claim to reason or right to opinion on the matter, as they have killed almost all wildlife...and the forests disappeared long ago... great record you have there.
@@goatamongsheep4296 LOL!! First: I am not "Europe". Second: Europe's forests make a third of all forest-aereas in the world. In Germany we just welcomed back bear, wolf and lynx after more than 100 years...
It’s not that 9dk what to say but where to begin, don’t interfere with the nature? Where we did not interfere with the nature?the oceans? We have practically raped the nature, which within itself is another concept and have no doubt that the nature will retaliate. You are shooting a video, you are there, nature is only the areas that we can’t have any presence, not even visual. Who the f0cking said not to help an animal and let it get tortured. I am so sick of shallow regurgitating public trying to act intellectual saying don’t interfere with the nature. You don’t even know the meaning of that because you have raped the nature so often that interfering shouldn’t mean mean a thing to you. We human owe it to the nature, no matter what the action to be, we have to do everything to stop an animal from getting tortured. Get your focking head out of the box.
@@dondoit3336 you need to keep your head in the box. You are just brainwashed by a political agenda blaming man for the actions of mother nature. We are not causing anything seriously enough that causes the complete destruction of anything. We eat animals just like animals eat animals. To help a wild animal that's overpopulated is absolutely ridiculous he wouldn't survive in the wild once humans interfere he would be habituated to humans makes him easy targets for hunters. You need to calm down relax before you have a stroke stop blaming humans for what we can't control!!!!!
@Yesindeed126 really? We all watch this video. It’s not a happy video because an animal is in a bad shape. You can read the comments. Wouldn’t this be a much happier video if the park helped the lone wolf that happened to be present in their video? I am not saying go looking around to find all animals that are in a bad shape and do something about it. I am saying, when you show an animal in a bad shape, then do something about it too. What doesn’t make sense about what I am saying. You got so many viewers because of the wolf, then fovking do something about it. You also have to understand, human’s have this sick side to them, they love to see other beings getting tortured. I have seen many sick comments trying to hide behind their intellectual bs so they can satisfy their sick hunger for other beings getting tortured. You are probably one of them. Lol
Don - the park does not rehabilitate nor interfere. Wolves are not an endangered species but they were an important part of the park's balance in the circle of life. They protect the park as an ecosystem and we all learn from it. Elk - Wolves - Coyotes - Sheep - Pronghorn - Grizzly - etc. all find a balance in the park and death is part of that balance. I completely agree with you that we need to do more to restore and protect wildlife but the issue isn't with regards to what happens in Yellowstone but rather why we don't have more protected large ecosystems for wildlife. We really can't protect and restore each animal. We have to restore and protect a place or ecosystem where these animals can flourish as have for thousands of years ...and left alone. Just because we can watch or hike amongst them don't make their environment any less wild if we just watch and leave them alone.
@@TheHuntingSpot I used a full time video camera - I have used a DSLR in the past but there are too many downsides to them. You can use the new Iphone 13 and Phoneskope and get decent footage. I have some phoneskope stuff but even phone shooting has tons of limitations that are frustrating.
@@TheHuntingSpot I use to use some phone scope equipment but found it to be unreliable when I really need it the most. I moved to Swaro and a 4/3rds to capture. Lots more to come from the past few weeks - I tons to post. Best, Ron
@Yellowstone Video that Bison bull didn’t die from natural causes I have a theory that he got injured during a fight with another bull and got abandoned by his herd. From how severe his injuries were he couldn’t walk properly, laid down and died from dehydration and starvation in that spot from his injuries.
Dylan - you might be right, I would have no way of knowing. One thing to keep in mind is that mature bulls really never spend time with a heard unless it it mating in the fall. Bulls group up in 2-3 sometimes 4 bulls when younger. The 2-3 bulls is likely because 4 or 6 eyes is better than just two. A grown mature bull have very little to fear in the park. Almost nothing can take down a mature healthy bull even when alone. So yes he could have been hurt for some reason. Please do subscribe! Keep the comments coming.
Nature doesnt give a SHT about us. Dont call it Mother Nature (Mother Earth) for wrong emotions You got. I would rather believe in a God, and not in stupid things.
Which does *not* mean, the strongest and healthiest will survive but the one that is most adapted to the conditions he is living in. The one who "fits" best.
Of course they know. If he had been healthy they would never have buzzed him like that. Wolves hate Coyotes and treat them the same way lions treat hyenas
I just posted a new video ua-cam.com/video/ZFPtRxkZ-0E/v-deo.html "The War Continues" this time Wolf-vs-Grizzly this one was fun to watch so I shortened it down for others to watch in a reasonable amount of time. Thank you again for commenting too!
He actually sat and ate for 15 mins. I just find that a lot people don't really like to watch parts being torn off and consumed. I get it, its nature but people then give it a thumbs down.
I thought that park rangers would be called in to either put it down, or sedate it and take it to a wild life vet to get it's leg fixed up, it seemed to be young enough to be reintroduced back to the wild afterwards, in my opinion if it is in a national park it should have got help there are groups that will take care of injured wild life if its possible. poor thing its probably dead by now if it didn't get help.
It is not the job of the park to spare wild animals the fear of predation or the agony of death. It is the park's job to PRESERVE the horrific conditions of the wild.
@hankgoresich6836 comment is correct. The National Park Service mission is: Preservation, Not Rescue and Rehabilitation. This means preserving what is wild. "An animal’s survival depends on its own daily decisions and natural selection. Animals with traits that make them better adapted to the environment will tend to survive, reproduce, and pass on their genetic characteristics more than animals without those traits. Through this process, natural selection shapes the behavior of wildlife. Actions like feeding, husbandry, and rehabilitation contradict the National Park Service mission by shielding animals from the forces of natural selection and creating a zoo-like atmosphere where animals require assistance or protection from people." - YNP Death is a Necessary Part of Nature "In the wildness of Yellowstone, animals that are vulnerable or make bad decisions become food for others. It can be difficult to watch nature take its course, especially when young animals are involved and human actions may have influenced the outcome. However, each year animals have more offspring than can possibly survive. The death of some animals is a necessary part of sustaining our populations of predators, scavengers, decomposers and, eventually, herbivores once the nutrient cycle comes full circle. Yellowstone is not a zoo or an animal park; it is the wilderness home to countless creatures living in their own environment on their own terms." - YNP www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/whyyellowstonedoesnotrescuewildlife.htm
It’s common practice for the Rangers to put injured animals in a van and drive them to the nearest McDonald’s so they can get a couple burgers and after eating they get returned to the park. Although there are few animals who actually prefer tacos so in those situations they drive them to Taco Bell instead
3:20 wolves can easily kill coyotes you said i dont know about that i just ran into a coyote that was just as big as any wolf i have seen and i have been to wolf parks this coyote must of weighed around 70 +lbs tall like a husky ,so i dont think a wolve could kill above average size coyotes
@@Yellowstonewolves might of been the other pack coyotes with it were small though and they all looked like regular coyotes except this one was too big but it didn't look like a dog either anyway guess I'll never know I just avoid going to that spot anymore 😔
@@Yellowstonewolves Hey there yes I’m doing great. I ended up spending the summer in Mission beach 🏝️ in San Diego slimming down hitting the gym 6 days a week and playing drums on the boardwalk twice a week! Life is good but I do miss shooting wildlife photography!
@Yellowstone Video or my other theory is that the Bison bull was injured from a poacher trying to take him down and missed his kill shot and hit him in the flank and still caused him a severe internal bleeding from the bullet severing his pulmonary artery and bled out and died right where you are now.
The beeping and whining of your camera is hard to listen to had to turn off the sound. Y’all could zoom out some instead of struggling to track the animal if y’all are looking for donors to enjoy the videos.
Me too. There are so many ways that things can hurt out there. It you run across a Yellowstone meadow or open space, you will end up with a broken ankle. There are so many fox, badger, ground squirrel holes out there. I have seen even bison fall when running. Best, Ron
IMO they should have tranquilized it, let it's leg heal, then release it since they are trying to bring back the population, might as well help when you can, this would have been a perfect time. Glad to see it get food.
They do have a very strict policy www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/rescuingwildlife.htm Please do subscribe if you can lots more content to post. Best, Ron
Beautiful looking animal to bad it won't last long with a broken foot and a pack to help support it ❤💙 that's the reality of loving wildlife you can't help them when injured
rare to die of natural causes..good for the bison to have such a long life. This also might be that wolf's last quality meal, unless it finds more kills to scavenge.
Brians Art - Thank you so much for watching and commenting. Please join the “Wildlife Support Team” by subscribing to the channel if you can, much more to come and I so appreciate your support. - Best, Ron
Natural causes or killed by predator two ways animals die. How is it rare to die of natural causes. Stop commiting with feelings when your feelings don't add up to facts.
I have two wolf hybrid pups so it was heart breaking for me to see the wolf limping like that. I would've gone to feed it for sure, but I lack IQ points lol....
Humans have destroy many wildlife and wildlife's natural homes, its our duty to rescue injured animals even predators like wolves. Hope a ranger tranquilizes the wolf and gives it some vet care
@@chuckrice5795 They rescue many types of animals injured in Africa wildlife experts usually tranquilize predators and prey to give them a second life, no reason other countries cannot do the same
Sorry for not responding soon I missed your comment. I would better other wolves took it down and this lame wolf was just scavenging. There is a coyote doing the same that is lame in this video. ua-cam.com/video/jxcS3P7DKdg/v-deo.html
Someone needs to call a vet instead of filming this shht! That wolf won't survive long in the wild with a badly broken leg! Atleast in Africa they help alot of injuried animals instead of watching them suffer. Come On Man.. 👀
@@jiteshjensondas277 I couldn't just stand by watching the poor guy die a slow painful death.. They should've tried to help IMO because it's the right thing to do.
@@troybutcher6451 In many places people can get in legal trouble for helping animals, and more importantly interfering in this scenario may also negatively impact the wolf itself, in the case that it will be hard to return the wolf to the wild and reduce its interaction with humans. I 100% understand the feel of how we need to show sympathy to the wolf's suffering, but at the same time the wild needs to stay wild.
@@jiteshjensondas277 Kind of hypocritical don't you think.. When we destroy most of they're natural habitat, hunt animals to extinction or damn near.. Then play God by trying to clone them to save a species existence! BTW it wouldn't be hard to return a grown wild wolf back in its natural habitat.. Yeah it might take a few months for his leg to heal but he wasn't born in captivity. Js
@troybutcher6451 @jiteshjensondas277 Thank you to both of you for commenting. Yellowstone is an enormous ecosystem managed by the National Park Service. 1) Visitors are never allowed to do as you mention to help an animal. Doing so would get me fined and banned from the park. 2) Visitors are not trained nor have the resources to take a wild wolf to a vet, that would only end up with the visitor most likely hurt. 3) The park has lots of wolf researchers and biologist doing the monitoring and evaluation every day. I see them out in the park. They don't need my help. 4) Will the park make the decision on occasion to euthanize an animal, yes and I will post a story on one of these occasions. 5) Please don't get mad at me or my videos. I just share what I see in the park as a guest and tourist. The creatures are amazing and the park staff does an excellent job. Their wolves are doing well. The number one cause of death in wolves is from other wolves. We don't know if this wolf was attacked my another pack or an alpha within its own. We can only watch and enjoy the wildness of the park.
Out where I live there was a huge black bear that was hit by a car thats was going 60 and totalled it. Bear survived with a broken leg thaf it chewed off. It surived for years after until a hunter finally shot him ( i wish they didnt :(.....i think the wolf will make it.
Even if Mike Tyson had a broken arm, I think all of us would still show him the amount of "respect" these Coyotes showed this lone injured Wolf. They harassed him, but knew that even with his broken leg, he was still dangerous enough to kill or seriously wound them. They played it safe by going ahead and letting him eat in peace. He was by himself so wasn't going to eat much, and there was enough of this big carcass left for the Coyotes to come back to.
Don't forget Mike Tyson can still chew off an ear. Lmao
@Fire Starter lol
I think Mike Tyson with a broken arm is still gonna be able to beat up most men.
So true animals are amazing at optimizing- cost/benefit- if the Coyotes hadn’t fed it would have been a different story though I would still bet on the wolf’s ability to fight through pain and the coyote’s natural alignment to the hierarchy
You are right Blake - many a coyotes have been killed by wolves. A wolf bite could kill but worse it could injure the coyote to the point it can’t feed itself. For every predator self preservation comes first. You have to be able to fight another day.
Fascinating video, thank you. It’s hard to watch any animal suffer, I hope he makes it. Thanks again.
You bet and I agree Dori - great to see you back again on the channel. Best, Ron
@MY YT Great - please do film that and share it. I tried to get him to jump into a dog crate in the back of Subaru and he just wouldn't fall for it.
That's good news, MY YT, hope you are able to film it as Ron requested. Well done. It's nice to know the wolf has a chance at survival.
@MY YT so glad to hear this! Hope this guy pulls through. 😿
Now way that wolf lasted the rest of the week.
It’s amazing to see the wolf recognise it’s own pack strategies when they are being used against it 👍
Yes, when they attack a mountain lion and it runs away like a domestic cat 😂😂
Thank you so much for watching and commenting.
Just amazing thanks for sharing
2 Canadians living on the Gulf of Mexico sending support to the world Godspeed J&D
🙏🇨🇦🇨🇦🇲🇽🇲🇽🇨🇦🇨🇦🙏
Thanks so much - Jennifer and Darryle, I am creating and sharing much more. Recording and editing takes tons of time. I really do appreciate the comments and support.
Come on guys of course it’s a wolf. You can clearly see the difference smh. You all keep asking a million times..you do not have to be an expert to see it’s a wolf.
they're not all watching the same footage as we are. They're viewing it through binoculars, cameras, and the naked eye. It was no doubt less apparent.
You might have been right, some folks that day may not have had binos but if you know wolf and coyote behavior you probably could tell the difference.
Yea❤
@@kris10tentin Agree!
He's definitely got spunk, if he wasn't injured that would have been his meal no problem hope his left get better and he doesn't get an infection due to a break and hope he can scavenge enough to make it through... I'm from Casper n always love seeing the Wyoming wildlife we are blessed with thrive
Looked like the wolf got a good feed before she/he walked off. Rangers should tranquilize the wild and give it some vet care help it's leg
Well in Yellowstone they don’t capture and treat animals unless they are endangered species. Otherwise wildlife is left as it always has been.
I have been to Casper a couple times on my way to somewhere. Great wildlife in Wyoming! I am sorry for not responding sooner please forgive me.
Great film. Gotta love and enjoy wildlife while we still have it. Noticed the wolf looking straight at the camera several times while feeding. Yote's didn't seem to notice it...Thanks for sharing the video !
Thank you for watching and commenting - I missed your comment when replying so please forgive me for the delay. Best, Ron
can you give timestamp of wolf noticing the camera
@BigDicTRP At 7:00 and a few more times before he limps off.
I hope the wolf gets the help it needs 🥶
In Yellowstone - animals are left alone. Nature takes its due natural course.
It's a wild animal.
this wolf was most likely injured trying to pull down a elk. he was starving and decided to risk his life to eat. he will bulk up weight eating and possibly help heal a sprain. if it's broken his future is grim if he encounters a pack of wolves from unknown pack. wishing him fast healing. 🙏
Marc, Thank you for commenting - hope you subscribe, much more to post!
How long did the wolf feed? Did it leave the carcass or was it chased off?
It would be great if we could follow the wolve's activities and see what happens to it. Can a wolf recover from such an injury? I suspect it cannot.
Rachel - glad to see you are back on the channel. This is great feedback and I will keep this in mind to have done a follow-up. Can a wolf recover from this? I am sure some people will say yes and other will say no. Of course it depends on the severity of the injury, which none of us know but over the years I would say 30% of the time they can overcome a limping injury. About 70% of the time they don't and continue to be lame for a long period of time. Those that survive but are lame do end up with much short life spans and sometimes challenged by other wolves if it were a dominant wolf. This wold did spend 15 mins feeding and I should have posted that note in the video. I have been shortening that because some folks are sensitive to those images and I didn't want to create a channel with a lot of gore. He did get a full belly before leaving so he added a few days to his life to recover. Best, Ron
Good question. It is what I thought when the video finished. How long did the wolf feed?. Thanks to Yellowstone video for the response.
I saw a video of a wolf with three legs. And he was fat like a ballon. So i hope the beautiful protagonist of this video be able to survive long and healthy.
@@Yellowstonewolves and people are sensitive to reality being censored or being inaccurately depicted for any reason, as this creates a distortion of reality.
Whatcha gonna do when we come for you??
@@juangp632 I saw with my own eyes a coy-wolf who got along quite well for years on 3 legs. I don't remember which leg, but completely missing, so not as serious an injury as the wolf in this case. A coy-wolf is a cross between a (eastern red)wolf and a coyote.
@@goatamongsheep4296 Thanks a lot !!. After your commentary i am surer that the protagonist of this video is walking through the woods, healthy like an apple. I wish it.
That's Why they say, even injured and alone, don't underestimate a lone wolf
So true. Thank you so much for watching and commenting. Please join the “Wildlife Support Team” by subscribing to the channel if you can, much more to come and I so appreciate your support. - Best, Ron
@@Yellowstonewolves You should've been calling a vet instead of watching him suffer like this. Js
@@troybutcher6451 call a vet for a wolf in the wilderness? Not how the world works.
So hard to watch but thank you for this.
I understand and sorry for my delay in responding - thank you for watching and commenting.
Great teamwork that the coyotes had displayed. Some of them would distract the wolf and the others would take a bite out of its tail to ensure that the wolf wouldn’t touch their food.
I hope it's leg or foot heals, tough animals time is often a good healer, hopefully with the help from its pack this wolf will recover 😇 All the best mate 🏵️🌱🏵️
What's the high pitch noise? Bugs?
I hope so too
Was this wolve likely alone when he was injured? I'm curious how injured wolves fare in their packs when they are injured. I know wolves have a hierarchy and a family like structure so do injured wolves remain with their pack or do they fall behind and eventually fend for themselves? Than you for the video.
Injured Wolf has to leave unless it's a pregnant alpha female.
@@jayleeclough1199 Our brave friend with the broken leg has no chance in the long term... :-(
@@claudiakiel4944 unfortunately I know.
Yes, "mother" nature is a cruel one, from the human sentimental sight. In reality "she" is perfectly neutral. I would like to be able not to feel pity for the lost ones...
@@claudiakiel4944 nature is not cruel! Would you sacrifice the whole army for one soldier?
Great vid! New to the channel and love it! I was surprised you didn't show the wolf eating considering it's just part of nature and this is a wildlife channel. I read you started to take some of that type of footage out of the vids bc some people are sensitive. lol?? Def appreciate your footage! Thanks!
Yea I am trying to strike a balance about showing nature but not being too gory about. A lot of times when I am watching it can be hard to see but I get it, it is the circle of life. On this one I didn't put enough in and many thought he/she didn't get to eat. Thank you so much for the comment too. So much appreciated. Best, Ron
Definitely a wolf! Coyote have longer pointed noses. Wolves have wider fat snouts
Correct Steve and well said. Best, Ron
And several other highly visible differences.
Poor wolf. I hope he can find enough to eat to buy some time for that leg to heal.
Umm if your leg is broken i think that requires surgery to full recover from. Which that wolf isn't going to get out in the wild....
I just posted a new video ua-cam.com/video/ZFPtRxkZ-0E/v-deo.html "The War Continues" this time Wolf-vs-Grizzly this one was fun to watch so I shortened it down for others to watch in a reasonable amount of time. Thank you again for commenting too!
I liked before watching!
Thank you Joeresio
It’s interesting how God created this amazing food chain. It’s just sad when It’s an injured animal or a baby becomes dinner👺. By the way, these videos are wonderful
Linda, Thank you so much for watching and commenting, much more to come. Please do join the wildlife team & subscribe. Best, Ron
It's interesting how this amazing food chain naturally evolved.
@@sqlblindman I agree. I love watching wildlife.
Amazing to see no war broke out in the comments over this one comment seems Twitter has yet to find this let it stay this way
God did not create the food chain, it was a result of mankind sinning, before the fall there was no death or suffering or pain.
I've seen 3 legged dogs adapt well to life. Of course they didn't have to hunt for their food but some of them were still loose dogs on the street and got into fights. When his paw heals as well as it will, he should have a chance to make it. He's going to have to do a lot of scavenging unless he has a pack to once again return to.
Hey thank you for watching and commenting - Please do subscribe if you can. Best!
They are very special 🙏🙏
I agree Thank you so much for watching and commenting on the video, hope you can subscribe. Best, Ron
Wolves are badass! Never forget!
Will you be returning to Yellowstone this season?
Yes - in fact I am here now.
@@Yellowstonewolves cool. We spoke on the phone last year I believe. I’m still working as the Bear ambassador for the Forest service again this season. I’m also doing a lot of livestreams on my UA-cam channel.
Look in that wolves’ eyes. Highly intelligent
I agree - sorry for the delay in responding.
Are these animals just used to you being close by? They look right at you and don't seem fazed at all. Amazing video btw. I am a wolf lover for sure, but I also love coyotes. Anything dog like lol. Of course in a showdown I would always be team wolf 🐺
I love your comment - I am huge dog lover too. I wish I could take one of the wolf pups home but I think they are much better off in the park left alone. I would say a lot of the animals are very wary of people but not always afraid as long as people stay in the spots they expect them to be. I would say the biggest thing when watching them is for people to stay quiet. I always want to watch them do what they will and not create anything that will influence it otherwise. Please do join the team and subscribe. Best, Ron
I'm guessing this is a high magnification lens so they were very far away from this.
@@phillhuddleston9445 You are correct. I really don't want the animals focus or worried about me. Best, Ron
@@Yellowstonewolves keeps your ass safe first and foremost.
I think wolfs and coyotes don’t care if you harm them, or if they see a small pray like a pet or kid.
Looks like a full grown wolf?? If it's injured that badly I'm guessing it won't be able to join a pack or much less even keep up with one.. You can kind of sense the desperate grit from the wolf taking chances like that, who knows how long it couldn't eat due to its injuries. Really curious how an apex predator got itself into that situation. Thanks for the video
Chris injuries in the park can happen from all kinds of ways. It seems that a big reason for leg injuries is running and having a leg land in a hole dug by a badger, ground squirrel etc. I have seen pronghorns, bison, wolves all wander around with injured legs. I have not see these types of injuries in bears or elk. Thank you so much for watching and commenting. Please join the “Wildlife Support Team” by subscribing to the channel if you can, much more to come and I so appreciate your support. - Best, Ron
Wolves don't really "join a pack". What they do is find a mate and start a pack, their pack mates are their children/siblings. Occasionally a pack will allow a distantly related wolf to join them, but it's relatively rare.
Wolves are known to take care of injured pack members though
Id like to know how big the elk horn was that was laying there on the ground you see just the tines in one of the parts where the wolf is defending itself
Hi Brandon - I will go and check the footage. I will post a pic of on the communities tab of the channel. I did just post an Elk rack picture I took this spring. Was one of the largest I had ever found. Did this for you. Please do subscribe if you can. Best, Ron
Great video 👍👍
Thank you 👍 Please do subscribe Diontae and see you on the next video. Much more to come.
Can the fracture heal by itself in the wild?
Not likely. But there have been wolves that recover with a limp and make another year or so. They resort to scavenging because they just can’t hunt. A few years ago there was a female hurt the male mate did some killing for the two. She might have had a litter they we preparing for is something, not sure.
Does this wolf have a pack ? Did it end up surviving? Any other sightings of it after this
Hi Mike some have said it was part of the Junction Butte pack but I didn't see it around the den again. I am looking at my footage to see if that wolf was there on any of my recordings. I am still working on it. Best, Ron
@@Yellowstonewolves so most likely this wolf wont survive ?
Probably call in park Ranger to either put it out of its misery or try to get it to a wildlife rehab santuary.
@@lesterhall5145 ...I hope someone did.
did you call for help for the wolf? He needs assistance...
I understand and share this human sentimental reaction, but as far as I know, the rangers are not supposed to intervene in any of the natural processes. It's for good reasons.
@@claudiakiel4944 I strongly disagree with that. It is the same logic they used when they said humans should not stop wildfires and the fires grew and made huge damages. Humans cannot keep getting selective responsibilities. the wolves were re-introduced tot he park by humans after having been killed by humans..
@@giogiogio333 As far as I know - I live in Germany - it's about intervening in the destiny of individuals, nothing to do with wildfires which btw are manmade.
@@claudiakiel4944 the 'euro-vision' naturally concedes any claim to reason or right to opinion on the matter, as they have killed almost all wildlife...and the forests disappeared long ago... great record you have there.
@@goatamongsheep4296 LOL!! First: I am not "Europe". Second: Europe's forests make a third of all forest-aereas in the world. In Germany we just welcomed back bear, wolf and lynx after more than 100 years...
how did he get hurt? can i get part 2 plz actually part 1 when it was attacking him ??? 🤔🤔🤔🙏🙏🙏
Even though that wolf is injured, it can still kill a coyote easily if he catches one of them
So true Phoebe - hope you can subscribe.
But coyotes are fast
@@Muslim600-m3w Who says they aren't?
@@phoebe3122
Even after being caught, the coyote can escape
@@Muslim600-m3w yeah but who says they aren't?
Aws Nature ⛈️🌨️🌪️🌀
Very true - sorry for the delay in responding.
Where is his pack? Why doesn’t the park help the injured wolf? 😞
You don't interfer with nature and with injury the pack will run him off
It’s not that 9dk what to say but where to begin, don’t interfere with the nature? Where we did not interfere with the nature?the oceans? We have practically raped the nature, which within itself is another concept and have no doubt that the nature will retaliate.
You are shooting a video, you are there, nature is only the areas that we can’t have any presence, not even visual. Who the f0cking said not to help an animal and let it get tortured. I am so sick of shallow regurgitating public trying to act intellectual saying don’t interfere with the nature.
You don’t even know the meaning of that because you have raped the nature so often that interfering shouldn’t mean mean a thing to you.
We human owe it to the nature, no matter what the action to be, we have to do everything to stop an animal from getting tortured.
Get your focking head out of the box.
@@dondoit3336 you need to keep your head in the box. You are just brainwashed by a political agenda blaming man for the actions of mother nature. We are not causing anything seriously enough that causes the complete destruction of anything. We eat animals just like animals eat animals. To help a wild animal that's overpopulated is absolutely ridiculous he wouldn't survive in the wild once humans interfere he would be habituated to humans makes him easy targets for hunters. You need to calm down relax before you have a stroke stop blaming humans for what we can't control!!!!!
@Yesindeed126 really? We all watch this video. It’s not a happy video because an animal is in a bad shape. You can read the comments. Wouldn’t this be a much happier video if the park helped the lone wolf that happened to be present in their video? I am not saying go looking around to find all animals that are in a bad shape and do something about it. I am saying, when you show an animal in a bad shape, then do something about it too. What doesn’t make sense about what I am saying. You got so many viewers because of the wolf, then fovking do something about it.
You also have to understand, human’s have this sick side to them, they love to see other beings getting tortured. I have seen many sick comments trying to hide behind their intellectual bs so they can satisfy their sick hunger for other beings getting tortured. You are probably one of them. Lol
Don - the park does not rehabilitate nor interfere. Wolves are not an endangered species but they were an important part of the park's balance in the circle of life. They protect the park as an ecosystem and we all learn from it. Elk - Wolves - Coyotes - Sheep - Pronghorn - Grizzly - etc. all find a balance in the park and death is part of that balance. I completely agree with you that we need to do more to restore and protect wildlife but the issue isn't with regards to what happens in Yellowstone but rather why we don't have more protected large ecosystems for wildlife. We really can't protect and restore each animal. We have to restore and protect a place or ecosystem where these animals can flourish as have for thousands of years ...and left alone. Just because we can watch or hike amongst them don't make their environment any less wild if we just watch and leave them alone.
Thank you. Great video. Mind if I ask what equipment it was filled with and how far away?
Sure - this one I used a spotting scope and custom video rig at about 1/2 mile. My scopes are all Swarovski.
@@Yellowstonewolves very nice footage. Was it a DSLR attached to your Swarovski or a phone scope? Thanks
@@TheHuntingSpot I used a full time video camera - I have used a DSLR in the past but there are too many downsides to them. You can use the new Iphone 13 and Phoneskope and get decent footage. I have some phoneskope stuff but even phone shooting has tons of limitations that are frustrating.
@@TheHuntingSpot I use to use some phone scope equipment but found it to be unreliable when I really need it the most. I moved to Swaro and a 4/3rds to capture. Lots more to come from the past few weeks - I tons to post. Best, Ron
im confused which one is the baby wolf or coyote ??? 🤔🤔🤔🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️
Wolf: I may have a broken leg, but thanks for the food twerps.
More than welcome - have you seen this one? ua-cam.com/video/rla6Gs5JvsE/v-deo.html
Did any one see the nice elk shed? Dang good bull!!
An elk shed on a buffalo/bison would be ..rare and very valuable. Have you explored aliens yet?
Yes I saw it was wondering if they can be picked up if in a park?
No - you can pick them up and examine them but have to leave them for others to experience.
Sorry for the delay in responding - I missed this comment. Forgive me.
@@goatamongsheep4296 @ 5:54 dummy! Use your eyes! It's weird what you can find!
Wow, a single wolf can scare off a whole pack of coyotes.... That is why timber wolves are my favorite animal.
"The legs feed the wolf." -Herb Brooks
Hi North Force , Thank you for watching and commenting on the video. Join the "Wildlife Team" by subscribing if you can. Best, Ron
It’s leg probably got caught in a trap
Thank you so much for commenting and please do subscribe if you can. Sorry for the delay in responding to your comment.
For all of u asking why dident he help it it’s nature we cannot help an animal unless it’s been hurt by humans
Thank you so much, we can only watch. Its Yellowstone. Please do subscribe!
Did he even eat!?!? Was it edited?
Sorry - yes he ate for 15 mins and I edited it down. I should have edited that as a note. Best, Ron
@@Yellowstonewolves ok, thanks
I love those groups that gather in Lamar that are ALL very vocal “experts”.
Thank you so much for watching and commenting and please do forgive me for not responding earlier to your comment. Best, Ron
@Yellowstone Video that Bison bull didn’t die from natural causes I have a theory that he got injured during a fight with another bull and got abandoned by his herd. From how severe his injuries were he couldn’t walk properly, laid down and died from dehydration and starvation in that spot from his injuries.
Dylan - you might be right, I would have no way of knowing. One thing to keep in mind is that mature bulls really never spend time with a heard unless it it mating in the fall. Bulls group up in 2-3 sometimes 4 bulls when younger. The 2-3 bulls is likely because 4 or 6 eyes is better than just two. A grown mature bull have very little to fear in the park. Almost nothing can take down a mature healthy bull even when alone. So yes he could have been hurt for some reason. Please do subscribe! Keep the comments coming.
I can't watch .. :(
Thank you for bringing it though 💚
It is actually a great story. We were all rooting for the underdog!
Had to watch with the volume muted...couldn’t stand that high pitch sound
Ok thank you so sorry. I wasn't sure I heard it in the video but will check.
That’s the way of Mother Nature. The survival of the fittest.
Thank you Thomas so much for watching and commenting on the video, hope you can subscribe. Best, Ron
Nature doesnt give a SHT about us. Dont call it Mother Nature (Mother Earth) for wrong emotions You got. I would rather believe in a God, and not in stupid things.
Which does *not* mean, the strongest and healthiest will survive but the one that is most adapted to the conditions he is living in. The one who "fits" best.
@@claudiakiel4944 I never thought of it that way. You are absolutely correct.
@@thomaskelley5180 Thank you for believing me/Charles Darwin! :-)
glad he got to eat something .hope he got full
Hi Jody - he actually fed for close to 15 minutes. Great to see you back on the channel. Best, Ron
@@Yellowstonewolves Good to know, thanks!
A broken leg? Poor baby.
Do you think the coyotes know it's hurt?
Oh yea they know it is vulnerable. I don't want to give it away but the end comes out well.
yes, the Cayotes knows it is hurt.
Of course they know. If he had been healthy they would never have buzzed him like that. Wolves hate Coyotes and treat them the same way lions treat hyenas
E muito linda ver a natureza como realmente é
Concordo totalmente, eu realmente valorizo o tempo que passo observando a vida selvagem.
That wolf has been fighting.
Thank you for commenting and forgive me for my delay in responding to you.
Nice video
Thank you so much PermaFrost 77 - I hope you can subscribe. Best, Ron
eat up king, you earned it
Iria - Thank you so much for watching and commenting!
At the 2:28 mark it looks like my face when the burger is just too big.
I just posted a new video ua-cam.com/video/ZFPtRxkZ-0E/v-deo.html "The War Continues" this time Wolf-vs-Grizzly this one was fun to watch so I shortened it down for others to watch in a reasonable amount of time. Thank you again for commenting too!
Nice Elk shed at 5:53
Woah, I didn't even catch that. Good eye.
Thank you so much for commenting and watching the video. So sorry for the delay in responding.
I will post a pic later of one I found. Have you seen this video? ua-cam.com/video/1issl_2MMaI/v-deo.html&feature=sharec
Makes me cry
Thank you so much for watching and commenting, much more to come. Please do join the wildlife team & subscribe. Best, Ron
Is that a wolf?
Yes it is and a couple of coyotes too, please do subscribe. Much more to come.
Hope that wolf lives a long life
That wolf will not survive.
Thank you so much. Please do subscribe if you can. Have you seen this new one? ua-cam.com/video/rla6Gs5JvsE/v-deo.html
The wolf barely ate ? 😣
He actually sat and ate for 15 mins. I just find that a lot people don't really like to watch parts being torn off and consumed. I get it, its nature but people then give it a thumbs down.
@@Yellowstonewolves ah, i understand. I am relieved to hear he ate and may live
I thought that park rangers would be called in to either put it down, or sedate it and take it to a wild life vet to get it's leg fixed up, it seemed to be young enough to be reintroduced back to the wild afterwards, in my opinion if it is in a national park it should have got help there are groups that will take care of injured wild life if its possible. poor thing its probably dead by now if it didn't get help.
It's not a zoo
It is not the job of the park to spare wild animals the fear of predation or the agony of death. It is the park's job to PRESERVE the horrific conditions of the wild.
@hankgoresich6836 comment is correct. The National Park Service mission is: Preservation, Not Rescue and Rehabilitation. This means preserving what is wild. "An animal’s survival depends on its own daily decisions and natural selection. Animals with traits that make them better adapted to the environment will tend to survive, reproduce, and pass on their genetic characteristics more than animals without those traits. Through this process, natural selection shapes the behavior of wildlife.
Actions like feeding, husbandry, and rehabilitation contradict the National Park Service mission by shielding animals from the forces of natural selection and creating a zoo-like atmosphere where animals require assistance or protection from people." - YNP
Death is a Necessary Part of Nature
"In the wildness of Yellowstone, animals that are vulnerable or make bad decisions become food for others. It can be difficult to watch nature take its course, especially when young animals are involved and human actions may have influenced the outcome. However, each year animals have more offspring than can possibly survive. The death of some animals is a necessary part of sustaining our populations of predators, scavengers, decomposers and, eventually, herbivores once the nutrient cycle comes full circle. Yellowstone is not a zoo or an animal park; it is the wilderness home to countless creatures living in their own environment on their own terms." - YNP
www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/whyyellowstonedoesnotrescuewildlife.htm
Poor thing, he knows his time has come. One last effort before he turns to dust.
Thank you all for commenting, I am so sorry for taking so long to post a response. Please do subscribe if you can!
To bad that the wolf could not be darted and have his leg fixed .
Oh he could be but probably will provide a meal for the coyotes that night or a hungry bear. 😳🤷🏽♂️
A team tranquilized him, and fixed his leg. He’s been seen back with his pack, so that’s good to hear.
It’s common practice for the Rangers to put injured animals in a van and drive them to the nearest McDonald’s so they can get a couple burgers and after eating they get returned to the park. Although there are few animals who actually prefer tacos so in those situations they drive them to Taco Bell instead
@@timg7627 - I think you MIGHT be wrong in this case. I think they prefer Burger King, or Wendy’s hot & juicy!!! 🤣
@@chesterswingjr9796 You’re also wrong in this case, I just went to Wendy’s earlier today and it was not hot or juicy……and they f..k’d up my order! 🤔🙈
In the wild, common injuries like this and being alone as a wolf is most likely a death sentance. It is sad but nature
Well said and I agree with you. Thank you for posting that too.
@@Yellowstonewolves no problem! I appreciate your efforts capturing this awesome footages!
Those Coyotes dont seem too much smaller than. That wolf they are a good size. Kinda like the coy wolves we have here
Thank you so much for watching and commenting. best, Ron
3:20 wolves can easily kill coyotes you said i dont know about that i just ran into a coyote that was just as big as any wolf i have seen and i have been to wolf parks this coyote must of weighed around 70 +lbs tall like a husky ,so i dont think a wolve could kill above average size coyotes
You might be right or maybe what you saw was a coyote/wolf mix. I thought I saw a documentary on the CoyWolf en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coywolf
Please forgive in my delay in responding to you.
@@Yellowstonewolves might of been the other pack coyotes with it were small though and they all looked like regular coyotes except this one was too big but it didn't look like a dog either anyway guess I'll never know I just avoid going to that spot anymore 😔
I heard there’s a Grizzly feeding on a Bison carcass at Blacktail ponds!
It has been a while and I missed this comment. How are you doing?
@@Yellowstonewolves Hey there yes I’m doing great. I ended up spending the summer in Mission beach 🏝️ in San Diego slimming down hitting the gym 6 days a week and playing drums on the boardwalk twice a week! Life is good but I do miss shooting wildlife photography!
Determination and intelligence
Very true. Thank you for commenting and sorry for my delay in responding.
The people behind the screen talking about if the wolf is a wolf or not XD
Thank you for watching and commenting - I missed your comment when replying so please forgive me for the delay. Best, Ron
@Yellowstone Video or my other theory is that the Bison bull was injured from a poacher trying to take him down and missed his kill shot and hit him in the flank and still caused him a severe internal bleeding from the bullet severing his pulmonary artery and bled out and died right where you are now.
Interesting but there is no hunting for miles from the park or in the park. Even Bison hunting outside of the park is very controlled.
It has been genetically found that the Red Wolf is just a meer hybrid between the Gray Wolf and Coyote.
Thank you so much for watching and commenting and please do forgive me for not responding earlier to your comment. Best, Ron
No, their a species. The Us fish and wildlofe conducted a study themselves and found them to be a unique species.
Fly with the wind wolf brother.
Thank you and I hope you can subscribe too.
❤❤❤❤
The beeping and whining of your camera is hard to listen to had to turn off the sound. Y’all could zoom out some instead of struggling to track the animal if y’all are looking for donors to enjoy the videos.
The video wasn’t made for you
Thank you for the feedback, much appreciated. Thank you for watching and commenting, have you seen this one? ua-cam.com/video/rla6Gs5JvsE/v-deo.html
Wonder how the wolf got injured?
Me too. There are so many ways that things can hurt out there. It you run across a Yellowstone meadow or open space, you will end up with a broken ankle. There are so many fox, badger, ground squirrel holes out there. I have seen even bison fall when running. Best, Ron
IMO they should have tranquilized it, let it's leg heal, then release it since they are trying to bring back the population, might as well help when you can, this would have been a perfect time. Glad to see it get food.
They do have a very strict policy www.nps.gov/yell/learn/nature/rescuingwildlife.htm Please do subscribe if you can lots more content to post. Best, Ron
I don’t blame the coyotes one bit, if it was a pack of wolves good chance they’d be slaughtered.
Great point Jack and you are completely correct.
Hope some wildlife ppl rescued the wolf and gave her/him some vet care to treat it's leg
Beautiful looking animal to bad it won't last long with a broken foot and a pack to help support it ❤💙 that's the reality of loving wildlife you can't help them when injured
Very true too. Thank you for commenting.
rare to die of natural causes..good for the bison to have such a long life. This also might be that wolf's last quality meal, unless it finds more kills to scavenge.
Brians Art - Thank you so much for watching and commenting. Please join the “Wildlife Support Team” by subscribing to the channel if you can, much more to come and I so appreciate your support. - Best, Ron
Natural causes or killed by predator two ways animals die. How is it rare to die of natural causes. Stop commiting with feelings when your feelings don't add up to facts.
if the wolf and a coyote is the same size, I can not tell which is which
You just need practice, after some time you can tell by the body and walk. Thank you for watching and commenting.
The high pitch beeping is killing me bro
I will try to figure that out and fix it.
i thought wolves were much larger than coyotes
Some are but some are only just a little bigger while others are 3 times bigger
That comment is correct. A lot of variability in Coyote sizes.
I have two wolf hybrid pups so it was heart breaking for me to see the wolf limping like that. I would've gone to feed it for sure, but I lack IQ points lol....
Yea that might not have been successful. Thank you for commenting and very sorry for the delay in response.
Go with God, Lobo.
Thank you for commenting and I am sorry I did respond sooner. I missed some of the messages! Much more to watch and to post of wildlife.
Está clarisssimo que los coyotes y los lobos son animales muy diferentes... Cuántas diferencias!!!.
Tienes mucha razón e hice este video solo para ti. ua-cam.com/video/jxcS3P7DKdg/v-deo.html
Humans have destroy many wildlife and wildlife's natural homes, its our duty to rescue injured animals even predators like wolves. Hope a ranger tranquilizes the wolf and gives it some vet care
They more than likely will
@@chuckrice5795 They rescue many types of animals injured in Africa wildlife experts usually tranquilize predators and prey to give them a second life, no reason other countries cannot do the same
You think everyone should live in the city ?? they won't rescue the wolf. Letting nature take it's course is best thing to do
Stop smoking crack
Nowadays people somehow just love to assume their opinions are infallible... too much pride?
Lifespan of wolves are barely 10 years. Leg will be useable but he'll not be in a pack ever again. Maybe 3k left alive in North America.
The average lifespan of a Yellowstone wolf is actually 4-5 years - outside of the park wolves rarely live for more than 3 years.
@@emilka2033 Bullshit
Hi Todd, Thank you for watching and commenting on the video. Join the "Wildlife Team" by subscribing if you can. Best, Ron
HI Emilka - I think you are right about the life span. I don't remember what Rick M. said the oldest was. Best, Ron
@@Landphier bullshit
Be interesting to know that Canadian wolfs back story.
Thank you for commenting and forgive me for my delay in responding to you.
This wolf is probably injured from taking down that byson.
you really think one wolf can do that? OH YES LET ME KILL ONE SINGLE UNI ELEPHANT WITH NO PACK ILL DEFINITELY WIN THIS BATTLE
Sorry for not responding soon I missed your comment. I would better other wolves took it down and this lame wolf was just scavenging. There is a coyote doing the same that is lame in this video. ua-cam.com/video/jxcS3P7DKdg/v-deo.html
That wof wasn't long for this world .
I thought so too but folks say they saw it since that day out and limping around but better than it was that day. Best, Ron
Someone needs to call a vet instead of filming this shht! That wolf won't survive long in the wild with a badly broken leg! Atleast in Africa they help alot of injuried animals instead of watching them suffer. Come On Man.. 👀
It happened naturally and this is in a pure environment so I guess they did not want to interfere? What are your thoughts?
@@jiteshjensondas277 I couldn't just stand by watching the poor guy die a slow painful death.. They should've tried to help IMO because it's the right thing to do.
@@troybutcher6451 In many places people can get in legal trouble for helping animals, and more importantly interfering in this scenario may also negatively impact the wolf itself, in the case that it will be hard to return the wolf to the wild and reduce its interaction with humans. I 100% understand the feel of how we need to show sympathy to the wolf's suffering, but at the same time the wild needs to stay wild.
@@jiteshjensondas277 Kind of hypocritical don't you think.. When we destroy most of they're natural habitat, hunt animals to extinction or damn near.. Then play God by trying to clone them to save a species existence! BTW it wouldn't be hard to return a grown wild wolf back in its natural habitat.. Yeah it might take a few months for his leg to heal but he wasn't born in captivity. Js
@troybutcher6451 @jiteshjensondas277 Thank you to both of you for commenting. Yellowstone is an enormous ecosystem managed by the National Park Service. 1) Visitors are never allowed to do as you mention to help an animal. Doing so would get me fined and banned from the park. 2) Visitors are not trained nor have the resources to take a wild wolf to a vet, that would only end up with the visitor most likely hurt. 3) The park has lots of wolf researchers and biologist doing the monitoring and evaluation every day. I see them out in the park. They don't need my help. 4) Will the park make the decision on occasion to euthanize an animal, yes and I will post a story on one of these occasions. 5) Please don't get mad at me or my videos. I just share what I see in the park as a guest and tourist. The creatures are amazing and the park staff does an excellent job. Their wolves are doing well. The number one cause of death in wolves is from other wolves. We don't know if this wolf was attacked my another pack or an alpha within its own. We can only watch and enjoy the wildness of the park.
@Yellowstone Video I know there’s no hunting in the NP but that doesn’t stop Poachers from going in and doing it
Well Dylan - I can argue with that. A few years ago during the winter someone drove through the park and shot to Bison from the road. Sad.
I’ve seen vids on UA-cam where coyote destroyed wolfs some where not even injured
Ofc the wolves are out numbered. In a 1v1 or equal numbers the coyotes get destroyed, let's not kid ourselves
@@samo6083 yea but sometimes things are diffrent but most of the time wolfs destroy them
@@maddawg5016 The wolves would need to be disabled to lose. Its like a silver back losing to a monkey. 😂😂
@@samo6083 true
That must be old, weak , hungry , and illed wolves to be destroyed by coyotes !
That is a wolf. A lone wolf with no pack. Probably got injured while hunting bigger game like deer or elk.
You are probably right and so sorry for not responding to your comment. I missed it before.
He must be a young wolf if he’s a bit bigger then coyotes
Thank you for watching and commenting too!
Out where I live there was a huge black bear that was hit by a car thats was going 60 and totalled it. Bear survived with a broken leg thaf it chewed off. It surived for years after until a hunter finally shot him ( i wish they didnt :(.....i think the wolf will make it.
Wow -- what a story Jackson, please do subscribe if you can.
Caution right out the window when hunger sets in
Very true and sorry for the delay in responding.