Home
Wolf Facts
Puppies
Wolf Myths
Protect
Species
Timeline
Visit Wolves
Wolf Killers
Gallery
Multimedia
Poetry
Headlines
Action Alerts
WolfDogs
Dakota
MacKenzie
Links
Web Rings
|
SEE THE WOLVES
There are several places to visit wolves. Sanctuaries or in the wild.
If you visit the wolves in the wild.. PLEASE do not get close to them or interfer at all.
Wolves are very hard to find in the wild and a rare experience. If you do see a wolf in the wild do not come in contact with it... human contact
often leads to the death of a wolf. A rule to follow when finding wolves in the wild: don't let them know you are there and then
you won't be interfering.
In the wild:
Denali National Park in Alaska
Wolf Watching
Yellowstone National Park's Larmar Valley. If you see a cluster of vehicles parked along the road that runs through
the valley, stop because wolves or bears have most likely been spotted. The wolves will usually be a mile or more away.
Make sure you have binoculars.
Northeastern Minnesota. Some people have seen wolves walking along State Road 169 and U.S. 53.
Captive:
Arizona, Sonora - Desert Musem
California, Julian - California Wolf Center
California, Lucerne Valley - Wolf Mountain Sanctuary
Canada, Kerwood - Kerwood Wolf Education Centre
Colorado, Gardner - Mission: Wolf
Idaho, Boise - Wolf Education and Recovery Center
Idaho, Winchester - Wolf Education and Research Center
Indiana, Dillsboro - The Red Wolf Sanctuary
Indiana, Lafayette - Wolf Park
Minnesota, Ely - International Wolf Center
Missouri, Eureka - Wild Canid Survival and Research Center
Montana, West Yellowstone - Grizzly and Wolf Discovery Center
New Jersey, Columbia - Lakota Wolf Preserve
North Carolina - The Sanctum, Inc.
Ohio, Bolivar - Wolf Timbers
South Carolina, Awendaw - Sewee Vistor and Environmental Education Center - Red Wolves
Tennessee, Kingsport - Bays Mountain Park
|