The Denver Post

Sanctuary offers home to abandoned wolf-dogs

- By Rachel Ramberg

Wolves haven’t roamed wild in Colorado for almost 80 years. But nestled in a forest 45 minutes south of Westcliffe, the sound of a wolf’s howl can be heard echoing off of the mountains.

This howling haven is Mission: Wolf, in operation since 1986 as the longestrun­ning wolf sanctuary in Colorado. Founded by Kent Weber and Tracy Brooks, the sanctuary serves as an education center for anyone who is curious to learn about wolves and wolf-dog crossbreed­s.

“Today we have a quarter million wolves living in cages,” Weber said. “Most are dead within two years, because humans cannot take care of them.”

There are an estimated 200,000 wolf-dogs that are euthanized before their third birthday each year. It’s also hard to track that number, as it’s difficult to identify wolf-dogs

“The DNA between a wolf and a dog is so close, that we can’t regulate wolfdogs, because we can’t identify them,” Weber said.

Weber believes the idea to crossbreed wolves with man’s best friend first began after a swell in nature films during the 1950-70s, including the works of Jacques Cousteau and James Algar’s documentar­ies for Walt Disney. The 1960s also marked the lowest point in the United States’ wolf population, with just an estimated 200 left in the lower 48 states. Wilderness conservati­on was on the front of the public’s mind.

The dual phenomenon­s were also a cauldron for the wolf-dog’s popularity problem. Some people interprete­d the collective call to action as something other than conservati­on. A business opportunit­y in wolfdog breeding opened up to meet them.

“So now it’s replaced with ‘Own a piece of the wild: Wolf puppy for sale.’ And now you got people that breed a wolf with a dog. They want it to look like a wolf and act like a dog,” Weber said.

Mixing wolf and dog DNA is a genetic gamble. Combining opposing wild and domestic behaviors can create a conflicted and confused animal. No litter and no pup turning out the same only raises the unpredicta­bility. These wild behaviors begin to emerge only as wolf-dogs mature. By the time they turn 2 or 3 years old, most are heading toward a death sentence.

“So for two years, people can have this wolf puppy in their house, and it’s a great dog, and it acts like the kids, and it plays,” Weber said. “But when that wolf turns from 2 to 3, it’s like an adult going from 15 to 21: ‘Don’t tell me what to do.’“

It takes a special level of time, land and money to care for a wolf-dog. Most owners are unaware of that commitment when they first purchase their wolfdog puppy, and decide to surrender the animal. After that decision, the fate of a wolf-dog is bleak.

Animal welfare and management organizati­ons in Colorado are set up for wild animals and for domestic animals, but not for crossbreed­s. Wolf-dogs fall through these institutio­nal cracks.

“Now animal shelters manage domestic animals, so if an animal shelter gets in a part wild animal, they can’t take it. They have to euthanize it. If the wild animal managers take in a part domestic animal, they can’t accept it, it’s not a wild animal,” Weber said. “The wolf dog is the only species that falls in this gray area.”

Wolf sanctuarie­s are the only place for these crossbred dogs to land. But sanctuarie­s have to set their own maximum intake limit, and are usually at capacity. Mission: Wolf generally houses up to 40 wolf and wolf-dog tenants at any given time.

Places like Mission: Wolf face ongoing issues surroundin­g conservati­on by serving to the public as an education and visitor center, not just a sanctuary. Weber believes the best way for people to understand wild animals is to meet a wolf face-to-face (under the guidance of him and his team, of course). The experience is rare opportunit­y.

“We’re working very hard to support the public demand for a connection with nature,” Weber said. “We need to provide natural experience­s that support appreciati­on for ourselves and the world around us. We’re at a point in time where now humans are so afraid of nature, that we are being prohibited from touching nature.”

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