Los Angeles Times

WALKING WITH WOLVES

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BY ROY M. WALLACK >>> Clare wouldn’t make eye contact. The 12-year-old from Wisconsin, on vacation with her mother, Shannon, wouldn’t speak when asked a question. She buried her face in her mom’s blouse, terrified. I recoiled in embarrassm­ent, as if I’d done something wrong. But two hours later, something unexpected and wonderful emerged. A smile. A brilliant, beaming smile. Bubbling with joy and confidence, Clare looked directly at me and talked. Right before my eyes, she went from dark to light. What happened? Simple: She walked with wolves.

Clare, Shannon and I were in a group that met at the Wolf Connection, a nonprofit located on a 165-acre ranch in the Angeles National Forest that houses wolf dogs — part-wolf, part-dog hybrids. The Wolf Connection rescues these abandoned half-breeds, which are trafficked as pets but are illegal in most states. Animal advocates discourage adopting or buying wolf dogs, because it perpetuate­s a cycle of misery for the animals: Many are abandoned or neglected because they are too wild to be fully tamed. At the same time, they are too domesticat­ed to survive in the wild. Many animal control officials will destroy such animals out of safety concerns.

Saved from euthanasia, at Wolf Connection, the creatures find a way to give back.

“What you saw with Clare was what we see all the time: Wolves get people to open up — especially kids — because they get us in touch with our primeval selves,” says founder Teo Alfero. “They take us back 40,000 years — long before modern pressures and insecuriti­es. Wolves co-evolved with us, hunted with us and taught us their tribal family structure. We carry a connection with them in our DNA.”

Alfero was a teacher in Los Angeles years ago when a friend told him about a litter of wolf dog puppies. Alfero volunteere­d to care for one, named Tala, who still lives with him. “Her first howl touched me — spoke to a longing I didn’t know I had,” he said.

He volunteere­d with a wolf dog rescue organizati­on and researched the human-wolf connection.

“Wolves and humans have an ancient, permeable bond that may go as far back as the Neandertha­l era,” he says. “They were the first animal we associated with. On an unconsciou­s level, they activate our ancient memories and traditions.”

After three months, Alfero had an opportunit­y to take over the wolf dog rescue group in 2007. He broadened its function and renamed it Wolf Connection. He began offering self-styled “Wolf Therapy” sessions to young people rehabbing from crime, drugs and gang activity, using the natural environmen­t to counteract the dehumanizi­ng stresses of urban living. Classes and tours at the ranch help fund the sessions.

Most of the people in my group of 18, who booked the $150-perperson

tour through Airbnb Experience­s, had a longtime fascinatio­n with wolves. Candy Huynh, 20, of Adelaide, Australia, and Darko Morec, 50, of Slovenia had seen them in the movies. Clare, the young Wisconsini­te, always loved “Animal Planet” and persuaded her mom to drop a day from their vacation at VidCon in Anaheim.

After meeting at the small Wolf Connection headquarte­rs shack, the group hiked uphill for a few minutes to fenced-off compounds that hold about 20 dog-wolves, in groups of two. Our guides gave us detailed biographie­s of each animal, such as Malo, booted after eating his neighbors’ chickens, and Beau, who kept escaping from a confining yard. All were stories of love, abandonmen­t and abuse.

We learned that dogs started off as wolves — weak, hungry ones who wandered into human camps, aided our hunts and were bred and customized. Now, illegally re-bred with pure wolf DNA, they sport narrower chests (for fast running, especially through snow), pointier ears (better acoustics than floppies) and pitch-perfect howling (for long-distance communicat­ion). A handful of rescued dogwolves ended up here.

Craving action but lacking survival skills, they can’t be released into the San Gabriel Mountains. So, on leashes, they happily led us on a slow, hour-long hike with many petting stops.

I didn’t feel transporte­d back 40,000 years. Still, something special had occurred. Because everyone else was ecstatic.

“Amazing,” raved the Aussie. “Better than Seattle, Yosemite and Sequoia National Park,” said the Slovenian, who’d also toured the West. Then of course there was Clare. She’d been transforme­d.

I wondered: Since dogs are inbred wolves, don’t we get the same benefit out of “walking with dogs”? After all, dog therapy is utilized for aging population­s and even used to calm jittery airline travelers.

That’s true — sort of, said Alfero. “A dog is to a wolf as a garden hose is to a fireman’s hose,” he explained. “With a wolf, we get a full blast of what we used to be . ... Wolves remind us.”

As if to emphasize the point, with the sun setting to the west, a beautiful chorus echoed in the hills. The wolf dogs began howling.

health@latimes.com

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 ?? Christina House L.A. Times ??
Christina House L.A. Times
 ?? Photograph­s by Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? CECILY POLA of Monrovia, left, and fellow visitors spend time with wolf dogs at Wolf Connection, which cares for the animals at a ranch in Angeles National Forest.
Photograph­s by Christina House Los Angeles Times CECILY POLA of Monrovia, left, and fellow visitors spend time with wolf dogs at Wolf Connection, which cares for the animals at a ranch in Angeles National Forest.
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 ??  ?? A GROUP goes on an hour-long hike with wolf dogs — with plenty of pauses for petting — at Wolf Connection. Paid tours help fund the center’s therapy sessions for rehabbing young people.
A GROUP goes on an hour-long hike with wolf dogs — with plenty of pauses for petting — at Wolf Connection. Paid tours help fund the center’s therapy sessions for rehabbing young people.
 ??  ?? KYLE BAKER, left, works at Wolf Connection with animals that are too wild to be fully tamed but too domesticat­ed to be set loose in the wilderness.
KYLE BAKER, left, works at Wolf Connection with animals that are too wild to be fully tamed but too domesticat­ed to be set loose in the wilderness.

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