Monday, February 25, 2013

Educating French Wolves



(Paris, France)
In a bid to try and crackdown on the number of wolf attacks on farm animals the French government has announced a plan to try and "educate" the wild beasts.[...]

Under a proposed "National Wolf Plan," the government says it will conduct experiments into "educating" the canine carnivore, which is spreading stealthily in remote areas.

Rest assured, this scheme does not entail lecturing wolves about the cuteness of lambs or trying to convert them to vegetarianism.

Instead, it entails capturing individual wolves that are known to attack a local flock and then marking these bothersome predators before letting them go.

The theory is that the animal will be so traumatised by the experience that it will leave the sheep alone and instead hunt for deer, boar, rabbits and other wild animals.
What's better? Hungry and vicious? Or hungry, vicious and traumatized? I would suggest that, without therapy, a traumatized wolf is more dangerous than the frolicking-in-the-wilderness-and-eating-sheep wolf.

No comments:

Post a Comment