Natural World (1983) s27e10 Episode Script

Lobo: The Wolf That Changed America

Coming out west to hunt wolves was an impulse thing I never imagined it would change my life In the autumn of 1893 a man called Ernest Thompson Seton came to New Mexico These were the dying days of the old wild west and Seton's mission was to hunt down the last of the outlaws the outlaw wolves But what began as 2-week job turned into an epic duel a duel that would touch Seton's heart and one which, in the end, helped to change forever America's relationship with its wilderness and it was all because of one remarkable animal When I was a boy of ten, I was given this book "Wild Animals I Have Known" by Ernest Thompson Seton and it had a huge effect upon me Seton was a trap naturalist working on the prairies of north America and his first story is about Lobo, a wolf that it was hard to trap and he shows wolves to be brave, fearless, touchingly loyal to one another I've never forgotten it The stage for the drama could hardly be wider, or more epic New Mexico in the American southwest is a land where the rolling prairies meet the foothills of the Rockies By 1893, the year Seton came to hunt wolves this was a land being swept by profound change The modern world was steaming in, settlers were arriving by the trainload What had recently been the land of the apache and the buffalo was now the land of opportunity Livestock were pouring in, ranching was big business But the old west hadn't completely disappeared parts of northern New Mexico were still untamed In the remote Currumpaw valley, wild wolves still roamed the canyons A vicious war was underway to exterminate the last of these cattle-killers One of these wolves, however, seemed to possess an almost supernatural ability to cheat death Seton soon heard about this superwolf from the cowboys He was known as "Lobo" king of the Currumpaw Lobo and his band of outlaws were blamed for killing hundreds of cattle He'd hunted wolves for bounty money before and written a manual for his fellow trappers on how to catch them He even claimed that one of his Scottish ancestors had wiped out the last remaining wolves in the British Isles But behind the gun lay a more complex character Seton was a naturalist who'd grown up in the back woods of Canada with a real love and fascination for nature He was also an artist, trained in Paris and London, whose favorite subjects were the wild animals of north America The story of the hunt for Lobo is the story of a divided man On the one hand, a romantic, whose heart was with the wilderness and its wild creatures and on the other, a hired hunter, who, like the cowboys, saw wolves as somehow different from the other animals as wanton killers that had to be dealt with I am to get board and lodging, all expenses, and bounty monies, in exchange for which I shall rid the cowboys of their demon wolf I think two weeks should be enough to catch the pest Little did Seton know the remarkable wolf he was up against The wild and romantic story that follows is based entirely on the journal that Seton kept at the time, and the book he subsequently wrote It is, according to Seton, "almost completely true.
" "The animals," he later wrote, "were real characters, who lived the lives I have depicted.
" And yet, Seton made such surprising, almost heroic claims about Lobo and his pack that we are bound to wonder how much of it we can really believe A dread of this "Lobo" has spread among the ranchmen and now the price set on his head is $1,000, a record bounty for a wolf He is my number-one target Seton had come to New Mexico equipped to wage a poison campaign a tried and tested method from his wolf-hunting days in Canada A piece of meat laced with a few drops of strychnine makes a good wolf bait the poison causes violent spasms, and the victim soon dies of asphyxiation But it's crucial that the bait is free from the taint of metal, or any trace of human scent, or the wolf will get suspicious and avoid it It was late October, Seton set about laying his first baits Over the following days, he made a series of wide circuits around the plains dropping a piece of poisoned meat every so often taking care not to touch them with his hands, or to get off his horse Seton, the man who'd written the textbook on how to catch a wolf was confident that his expertly prepared baits would soon bring him his thousand-dollar bounty Alongside his hunt for Lobo, Seton also pursued his love of nature taking every chance to learn more about the wild inhabitants of the Currumpaw At first, this place seemed uninviting compared to the lush prairies of Manitoba But the more I explore, the more I realize it's a paradise Every spiny bush is teeming with life and every day I make new friends and learn new facts I was amazed to see the prairie chicken still dancing in the fall provided they're fat and fit, they seem to like nothing better than a shimmy They share the plains with hundreds of prairie dogs and as far as I can see, these little yap-rats never go more than 100 yards from home Every burrow is a plunge hole a sheer drop for rapid escape Seton the naturalist may have been cramming his notebook with observations but his hunt for Lobo was about to suffer a humiliating setback November 3rd: I set out in the afternoon to check my baits and soon picked up Lobo's tracks His monstrous paw print is unmistakable It measures over 5 inches from claw to heel, which must put him at around 150 pounds Further ahead, I found that Lobo had come to one of my baits, sniffed at it, and then picked it up I galloped on with eager eyes, expecting to find him dead within a mile A second bait had been taken, and then a third but though I scanned the brush, I saw nothing that looked like a dead wolf At the fourth bait, I discovered that Lobo hadn't really taken my baits at all but had merely carried them in his mouth Then, having piled the three baits on top of the fourth he'd scattered filth over them to express his utter contempt for my devices Descriptions like this seem far-fetched Just how clever are wolves? Could Lobo really have played a joke on Seton? Since Seton's time, we've learnt a lot more about wolf behavior Today, Yellowstone National Park supports a thriving population of wild wolves, which are closely monitored by scientists With over 20 years' experience of tracking and studying wolves, Dough Smith is one of the world's leading experts and uniquely qualified to assess what Seton wrote Seton was imputing these powers of ridicule to the wolves that really are beyond them Wolves really don't care about us, but it's well-known among wolf biologists that when you trap and catch wolves a lot, they get educated You teach them how to avoid you catching them The wolves that were left were getting educated by the traps and the guns and the poison that people were using to kill them And so what Seton encountered, in some ways, was the best of the best Seton had come to New Mexico as a hired gun to do a dirty job, expecting to stay for a couple of weeks But Lobo continued to elude him And as the weeks stretched into months, the untamed beauty of the land began to cast its spell He was falling in love with the west He was also learning of the old days, when the wild game abounded and the wildnerness was unspoiled I can usually reckon on seeing a dozen or more pronghorn on the plains Everyone says that these bands are nothing compared with the huge herds of days gone by This land is vast, but beyond these horizons, America is busy growing like an ugly, overfed brat too healthy to slow down, too young and ambitious to care about what it destroys along the way In the Currumpaw, Seton had plenty of time to think about America's dwindling wildlife Only a few years earlier, there had still been buffalo on the plains One of the cowboys saw a small herd not far from here in '88 - just five winters back These would have been the very last survivors in the entire southwest For tens of thousands of years, wolves had survived by hunting one of north America's most formidable prey species They'd pitted their wits against the sheer size and ferocity of the buffalo This required teamwork It was little wonder that wolves had evolved into such highly intelligent animals, with intimate family bonds After the buffalo, a cow was a piece of cake The wolf problem clearly is something that we have created First we annihilated the great herds of buffalo that the wolves depended on for food then we filled the prairies with our defenseless cattle I am told that Lobo's band alone kills cow every day Lobo's pack could slice through livestock, like a knife through butter Wolves probably could have killed as much livestock as Seton described a livestock was vulnerable and helpless, we bred their natural defenses out of them and wolves are intelligent and they had figured that out And so wolves have a mentality, really, of "kill everything you can.
" Seton still had a job to do And after the failure of his poison baits, he now brought out a new weapon the double-spring steel wolf trap Perhaps a more muscular approach would defeat the wily Lobo Darren Brown lives today just a few miles north of the Currumpaw on a ranch where Seton is known to have stayed In fact, some of Seton's actual traps were left here with Darren's grandfather, in this very barn Number 4.
5 wolf trap This is one of the actual traps that Seton used to try to catch Lobo These traps are designed to grab and hold their victims, rather than kill them I'm gonna put some soft dirt in here so the trap will sit just right Now, all the time, keep in mind this is a real trap it'd catch me as well as any animal The wolf will actually put his foot on this, is what triggers it to go off Now, I want to keep an open area under the trap pan, so that when the animal steps on it it'll actually spring the trap If you had dirt underneath it, it wouldn't go off, it'd just sit there a real key element is to make this about as natural with the ground around it as you can Okay.
Nothing exposed Now we have the trap set and though it's over 100 years old, it still function perfectly It's just designed to catch it, and still get blood circulation to their foot As it also hooked to a drag, as it goes along the ground, it'll get caught in a cactus or a tree, or anything along the way it slows them up enough, it leaves a mark on the ground and then you can follow the animal December 13, this afternoon I went up to the west canyon with rancher Bill Allen and we put out a dozen traps along one of Lobo's trails, always taking care to cover our scent and tracks Catching Lobo was becoming an obsession Seton simply didn't see wolves the way he saw other wild creatures Unlike wolves - which were killers animals like elk didn't threathen anyone's livelihood On the contrary, like the buffalo and the pronghorn, elk were now themselves in decline the victims of over-hunting by man Seton's love affair with New Mexico was deepening by the day In fact, his concern for all of north America's wildlife was very likely awakening But when it came to wolves, Seton was still thinking in the old way Throughout history, we've demonized wolves, seen them as wanton, bloodthirsty killers - almost the embodiment of evil Thursday, December 14th, I rode out to check my traps, and soon came upon Lobo's trail In the dust, I could read the whole story of his doings the previous night He'd run along through the scrub for a few hundred yards, then turned towards my traps but upon reaching the first one, he'd scratched up stones and earth till it sprung the trap and made it safe Continuing along the trail, Seton discovered that Lobo had disarmed over a dozen of his traps in the same way How could he have seen through Seton's clever plan so easily? Wolves are very, very observant of their environment They pay attention to a degree that people have a hard time fathoming They're just extremely attentive to every little thing in their environment They knew Seton was after them, and his other cowboys and so they became very attuned to his tricks and once they learned about traps, about steel, they become hyper-observant.
That's all they were doing The wily wolf had outwitted Seton once again It was going to be a long winter Week after week, I vary my methods and redouble my precautions, yet there is only defeat after defeat The cowboys complain bitterly of their losses and each night old Lobo mocks me with his triumphant howl December 24th, went in the afternoon to trail wolves, saw only coyotes and jackrabbits The wolves have killed 3 cattle and one colt - damn it! Christmas Day, 1893: found many wolf tracks today, but caught nothing January 5th: bitterly cold, baits untouched January 13th: got nothing, and saw nothing Today I've ridden without rest or stop, between 35 and 40 miles I am facing total humiliation After months of failure, Seton must have been at his wit's end He hadn't even clapped eyes on Lobo What he desperately needed was a lucky break and eventually, that's exactly what he got I camped out above the creek, close to where the snow geese and cranes are wintering They spend the nights huddled together in the marsh, beyond the reach of the coyotes and the wolves It was the commotion of the geese that led me to the clue I so badly needed I recognized Lobo's mark instantly and then noticed a second set of tracks, always, it seemed, running out in front Wherever these smaller tracks led, old Lobo was sure to follow, leaping and rolling in the mud Suddenly, I realized what was going on the old marauder was in love Seton knew immediately that the she-wolf was his big chance A cynical new plan formed in his mind During the breeding season, which, apparently, a lot of his story took place that male's tending that female extremely closely He rarely leaves her side during that time period I chase wolves with a helicopter It doesn't hurt them, we have to do it but when we move in on them, it's during the mating season, and you can always tell who's the breeding pair, 'cause they will not separate And so they're moving around in their own little orbit of two and the rest of the pack breaks up and goes every which way That male wolf, the alpha male, sticks right with that female I soon learned more about the Lobo's mate from the shepherds They call her "Blanca" because of her white coat and they say she leads Lobo a merry dance This tallies with the tracks I saw at the creek, and has suggested a way to catch her That's good.
That's good.
Right there Cunningly, Seton first placed traps rather obviously around a dead cow guessing that Lobo would stop and try to disarm them While he was thus diverted, Seton hoped that Lobo's mate, Blanca would run on to investigate the head of the cow, which Seton had cut off and put to one side It could only be approached through a narrow passage between rocks and it was here that Seton planted several of his best traps, properly deodorized, and concealed with the utmost care Wednesday, January 24th: This evening I am more excited and yet more anxious, than I have been in 3 long months Try as I might, I cannot get to sleep The following morning, Seton went up the canyon hoping that, at last, he'd struck a blow against Lobo He was in luck Blanca had walked right into his trap According to Seton, Lobo remained close by, reluctant to leave his mate But it would have been suicide to stay and face the man's guns Seton would later recoil for what he called "the inevitable tragedy that followed.
" But the plain fact is, he was here to do a job he was here to kill wolves Success at last.
Seton had claimed his first scalp And yet now, with Blanca dead Lobo was about to touch Seton's heart and change forever, the way he saw wolves The king of the Currumpaw had lost his mate Tonight I heard Lobo up in the canyon and there was an unmistakable note of sorrow in his voice It was no longer the loud, defiant howl I had heard so often, but a long, plaintive wail "Blanca! Blanca!" he seemed to call It was sadder than I could possibly have imagined I think there is an emotional attachment between wolves in a pack certainly among a mated pair, and the example I use is, here in Yellowstone, a wolf died a female wolf - she was the alpha, very similar to Blanca She was killed by another pack, and the alpha male - pardon my way of putting it - seemed to mourn He howled for two days after, more than anybody had seen him howl And he wailed, and he wailed, and he wailed A little bit of what Seton described in his story, we've seen here in the wilds of Yellowstone Seton had brought Blanca's body back to his cabin But the last thing he expected was for Lobo to throw caution to the wind and come looking for her Not once has he shown himself in all the months I've pursued him yet now he scorns his own safety to find his beloved Blanca We can only guess what doubts were creeping into Seton's mind but it was too late to stop now Seton had to strike fast, while Lobo's guard was down He gathered in all his traps - 130 in all, and set them on every approach to his cabin Last of all, he used Blanca's scent as a lure to draw Lobo in Seton set out the next morning with confidece Every outlaw tale has its showdown, and for Seton and Lobo, the fateful day was January 31st, 1894 His plan had worked The first thing Seton did was take a photograph It's an astonishing record that survives to this day Old Lobo, the king of the Currumpaw, is clearly visible caught in four traps - one on each leg That's what it had taken to stop this incredible wolf Seton had won After the long chase, he finally had Lobo at his mercy But face-to-face with his adversary, Seton's resolve faltered Perhaps killing Lobo no longer felt like a victory, but a crime Perhaps, in his eyes, Lobo was no longer "vermin," but a creature with dignity - courageous, loyal and loving Until now, Seton had seen wolves simply as indiscriminate killers but there were obviously much more than that They were the very embodiment of America's vanishing wilderness It's as if the conflict within Seton between the hunter and the naturalist - was finally resolved He decided to take Lobo back alive Sadly, it was too late Lobo made no resistance to me He never once looked at me, but acted as though he was alone on the plains His eyes were fixed on the far rolling mesas, his passing kingdom where his famous band was now scattered When the sun went down, he was still gazing out across the prairie but within a few hours, the old king wolf was dead We know that an eagle robbed of his freedom a lion shorn of his strength a dove bereft of his mate, all die it is said, of a broken heart And so it was with old Lobo, the king of the Currumpaw It was Lobo's loyalty to Blanca that had been his downfall and now Seton took Lobo to be with her again Seton profoundly regretted what he had done He never killed another wolf When I read Seton's story, to a certain degree I filtered through a lot of his flowery language I looked at it through a biological lens is what these wolves were doing, given the context of the time, which was no-to-little natural prey A laser focus on killing livestock, an incredible ability to avoid traps and guns and poisons Is all that possible? Absolutely Do wolves have an incredibly strong attachment between a mated pair? Absolutely Lobo, the last outlaw wolf of New Mexico, was dead The Currumpaw valley had been silenced It was job done By 1894, it seemed that virtually all of America's wilderness was destined to be cleaned-up, civilized and made safe Seton had come here in the twilight years of the wild west just as the Sun was setting on a magnificent, untamed world and he had played his part in its destruction If we are inclined to judge Seton harshly, we should remember that in the 1890 wolves were cattle killers and could ruin the livelihood of the pioneer ranchers and the cowboys But that was not the end of Lobo's impact on the world of men, in fact, it was just the beginning What happened next - to Seton, and the story he wrote about Lobo would have a profound effect on the relationship between Americans and their wilderness Seton returned east, deeply affected by his western adventure and determined to record what had happened In the story he wrote, he boldly cast himself as the villain, and the wolf as the hero His book, "Wild Animals I Have Known," was an immediate worldwide hit Virtually overnight, it propelled Seton from a little-known naturalist into a major celebrity But what really mattered to Seton now was saving America's wilderness before it was too late Historian David Witt thinks the turning point can be traced back to a single word in Seton's journal He has this last word in the entry - "Why?" And it's a very big "why," it was even written in large letters I thought maybe he was putting down that "why", asking "why did the animals die?" because he follows-up with a couple of notes about the physical condition of the animal But I think that the "why" was much bigger than that It really was a "why" asking, "why are we doing this?" "What is our relationship to nature?" "Why are we destroying it like this?" At a time when few people questioned the destruction of nature, Seton spoke up for the wilderness His views about the value of the wild found favor with politicians like Teddy Roosevelt and helped to turn the tide of public opinion Seton uses his influence to push for the creation of more national parks Thousands of ordinary Americans became aware of their spectacular natural heritage So Seton took a leading role in what became the conservation movement and eventually the environment movement He was talking about our relationship not only to animals, but to all of nature he was doing it in a very ecological way, he was certainly one of the first ecologists Seton also lobbied for hunting restrictions and anti-poaching measures and was instrumental in pushing through radical new laws to protect migrating birds He did lobby for environmental legislation including the first wildlife legislation that protected migratory animals And because of Seton, they lobbied congress and expanded federal government authority to the interstate control of wilflife It was a major increase in federal government authority and it laid the groundwork for every single piece of environmental legislation that has come after that time And it wasn't just a question of saving the wilderness Seton felt that people had to experience it in order to care about it that it should be be a part of everyone's upbringing Inspired by the values of native American culture, he founded the "Woodcraft Indians" an organization that taught children many of the skills needed for outdoor life, along with a respect for nature Many of these ideas were later adopted as the basis for the boy scouts in England and Seton himself was a founding father of the boy scouts of America By the early years of the 20th century the United States led the world in the conservation of nature and tens of thousands of children were heading off to camp in the woods and the mountains Seton had been a prime mover in all of this and it had all started back in the Currumpaw, in the autumn of 1893, when he had set out to kill an outlaw wolf called "Lobo" But what about wolves? Was the new nature-loving America ready to embrace its old enemy? For decades, Seton was virtually alone in his desire to protect wolves alongside the other wild animals It's taken a long time for the rest of America to catch up As head of the wolf reintroduction program in Yellowstone, Dough Smith sees his job as trying to complete what Seton began The change of heart to wolves has only been going for about 30 or 40 years I mean, literally, in the United States, into the 1960s, most people still thought wolves were bad And I think what we had is an awakening to a new environmental movement and that killing all these predators wolves and other carnivores - without question for so long I think the light bulb went on in people's heads as, "why?" But I need to be very clear there is still a large group of people who retain the old view of wolves I know people who have come up to me and said, "my grandfather killed off this animal to make life here easier and you're bringing it back.
" So attitudes have changed, but the old attitude still exists And so now we're at this very polarized bashing of heads about how to live in this world because some people feel predators like wolves, have no place still as many people felt in Seton's time But others are saying, "hey, we made a mistake, and we need to bring wolves back.
" Seton has had a tremendous impact on where we are today in terms of respecting nature And I think enough people - at least in north America - Canadians and Americans, recognize that we have maybe overstretched our reach, in terms of what we've taken Like many a good tale from the wild west, Lobo's story is a mixture of myth and truth On the one hand, we know that Seton could exagerate The reward on Lobo's head was not $1000, but a mere 12 And we know from Seton's diary that Lobo was not a monster over 150 pounds, but an average sized wolf On the other hand, thers's a lot of truth in this story Many of the traps that Seton used are still there, in New Mexico that Seton's photograph of Lobo in one of those traps And we have this It's the skull of one of the wolves that Seton killed with Seton's own lable still attached And the museum that owns it thinks it may well be the skull of Blanca Whatever the truth, the important thing about this story is that it depicted wolves in a more realistic and more sympathetic way than anything that had been written before The duel between Seton and Lobo may have ended in sad deaths, but it also breathed new life into the Americans' appreciation of their wilderness In later life, Seton returned to live in his beloved New Mexico I have been much criticized firstly, for killing Blanca and Lobo but chiefly for telling of it, to the distress of many tender hearts To this I reply: in what frame of mind are my readers left with regard to the wolf? Are their sympathies quickened toward the man who killed him? or toward the noble creature who died as he lived, dignified, fearless and steadfast? Right up to his death in 1946, Seton continued to reflect on the wolf that changed his life Ever since Lobo, my sincerest wish has been to impress upon people that each of our native wild creatures is in itself a precious heritage that we have no right to destroy or put beyond the reach of our children Next week, Natural World joins a S¨¢mi family and their reindeer on a grueling migration across Actic Norway
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