by Nasoosie » Mon Feb 16, 2009 9:32 am
An Adirondack Wolf is a species of wild canine that people up here have argued about its existing for years and years. I personally have seen just ONE, and it was when my daughter was in Kindergarten. She left the house to walk down the driveway to get the schoolbus, came back in, and said, "Mommy, there's a wolf in our yard." I had thought that perhaps it was a stray dog, but I went to look, and LO! It was most certainly a beautiful silvery wolf, just sitting at the edge of the plowed snow in the turnaround area of the driveway. It was taller than a yardstick, sitting down, had that beautiful wolfish face, and intelligent, curious expression. Once it saw me, it stood up long enough for me to see its beautiful bushy tail, whirled around and loped off through the new snow toward the pond. I went out and took pictures of its tracks, WAY larger than our Adirondack (ADK) coyotes' tracks, which I have stashed somewhere in my 'stuff.'
I have heard wolves howling across the mountain where I lived in a log cabin for a number of years, and recorded those howls on cassette tape. The howl of a wolf is something you will never mistake for the more common coyote howls. I never saw a wolf over there, but saw tracks many many times as I was skiing around that area.....tracks that could never have been made by a coyote.
On this side of the mountain, I have recently seen more and more LARGE canine tracks amid the usual coyote tracks, although I have never heard a wolf howl over here. I would LOVE to hear one. I hear coyotes all the time, and they are fun, too....especially when the babies attempt to learn the howling with the parents' nightly howl sessions! And I very often see coyotes on their morning hunting excursions for rabbits.
Yesterday, I picked up the large canine tracks, what I call an ADK wolf, not far from the house, and followed them for about a mile before they headed off into some thick woods where I couldn't ski. The tracks started off at a walking pattern, and very soon took on the configuration of the loping pattern that I photographed. We have an abundance of snowshoe rabbits (varrying hares) here on the property, as I don't allow any hunters on here. It's a perfect place for canines to find ample food. The size of the prints were more than double the size, almost triple the size, of Molly's prints, which are about the size of ADK coyote prints.
I would so love to see another beautiful wolf here. More and more people are reporting having seen them now, and biologists who analyze prints and scats have decided that we do, indeed, have a small population of wolves who probably migrated from Canada.
And that's what an ADK wolf is!
Last edited by
Nasoosie on Mon Feb 16, 2009 4:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Life is about learning to dance in the rainHappy travels!