| Click on the above header to see Jim and Jamie Dutchers website. They lived in Idahos Sawtooth mountains with 6 wolves. An amazing story. These pictures are theirs: |


















| Click to buy poster |
| Gray Wolf Growls a Warning as It Feasts on a Deer by Jim And Jamie Dutcher |
| A Couple of Gray Wolves, Canis Lupus, Stand Next to One Another by Jim And Jamie Dutcher |
| Gray Wolf Stands over a Pack Member Lying in Snow by Jim And Jamie Dutcher |
| A Warm Glow Comes from the Dutchers Tent at Night by Jim And Jamie Dutcher |
| Gray Wolf with a Menacing Expression Stands over Another by Jim And Jamie Dutcher |
| Napping Gray Wolves by Jim And Jamie Dutcher |
| Gray Wolf Submits to the Alpha by Jim And Jamie Dutcher |

| And one of my personal favorites from National Geographic. Click Picture to read article |

| Wichita, Kansas, 1997 Photograph by Joel Sartore "Gathering strength in a Kansas zoo, a litter of Mexican wolves boosts hopes of restoring this subspecies of the gray to New Mexico and Arizona." (Text from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Return of the Gray Wolf," May 1998, National Geographic magazine) RELATED Interactive feature: Return of the Wolf |

| Wichita, Kansas, 1997 Photograph by Joel Sartore A Mexican gray wolf snuggles with two pups at the Sedgwick County Zoo. At one time, gray wolves were among the most widely distributed mammals on Earth. However, by the early 1900s, unchecked trapping, poisoning, and hunting of these highly intelligent predators drove the species to the brink of extinction. (Text adapted from and photograph shot on assignment for, but not published in, "Return of the Gray Wolf," May 1998, National Geographic magazine) |