Somehow in my Odyssey over the last 21 years in Pittsburg I was asked to be the secretary of the states largest club, The Pittsburg Ridge Runners, and with more than a little apprehension, decided to help out, even though it wasn't the kind of position that people would fight each other to acquire. This was back in 1999, and to my surprise it was a great experience and got me to absorb a lot about how the club and the sport operated, and how complex it all was. Nothing like having to take notes and give a report at a meeting makes you pay attention and grow in understanding to a higher degree than before.
This position led me to run for Vice President of the club the following year, a position I have maintained since 2000, much to the chagrin of many individuals and organizations that I have asked hard questions of, in print!
The mundane workings of a huge club, whose membership exceeded 4400 members and has to deal with a budget approaching a half million dollars sometimes is ignored like the plague on the second Thursday of the month, when meetings are held. Who in their right mind would want to hear how bad things are, with irate lease holders threatening to punch holes in a system exceeding 200miles, having to pacify the whims of several hundred landowners, always seeming to have to many projects with too few dollars, not enough volunteers to get things done.............
blah,blah,blah. Its no wonder we have too few people at meetings, its just not a whole lot of fun, or even very interesting.
Once upon a time, however, I had been contacted by an amazing member of the National Wildlife Federation, based in Vermont, who rented snowmobiles from me in order to study the possibility of wolves re integrating into the northern reaches of New Hampshire. She would go out for two or three days at a time and snowmobile into areas as far as she dared, then snowshoe into extremely remote areas that she would envision wolves having everything they needed and look........and look........and look for any signs of wolf tracks, remnants of wild game kills, dens, fur, bones. She was relentless in her quest to answer the perpetual questions that some of the locals had spoken of for years. Wolves were out there, and she wanted to prove it!
Part of this quest was talking with me, as an officer in the snowmobile club, and suggesting we consider allowing her to attend a meeting and give a presentation on how to tell the difference between a wolf and a coyote. She wanted to talk to the groomer drivers who were out there in the middle of the night, and make sure that they could identify a wolf if they saw one. She wanted to increase her powers of observation by educating many "local pairs of eyes".
Recognizing that this could be a way to make meetings more tolerable to members we agreed to give her permission to "do her thing". This decision was one of the best things the club has ever done, with the resulting evening a memorable night to remember. We had mentioned this event at the prior months meeting and had almost double the number of usual suspects in attendance, who all ended up in an totally enjoyable trance for as long as that woman, whose name was Margaret Struhsacker, spoke and would have stayed till midnight if she went that long. It was fascinating to hear someone take the time to explain the differences in size between wolves and coyotes, along with handling real skulls of both animals for comparison, hearing about the shape differences of the rear legs of both animals, seeing, feeling and handling real pelts of both animals, seeing and handling plaster casts of both foot prints and noting the obvious huge size of a wolf track, and listening to someone who clearly understood a great deal about the plight of wolves in their struggle with the onslaught of civilization. Her presentation was backed up with a powerful Powerpoint program that showed some of the problems around the country, impacting the surviving packs in Yellowstone, Canada, along the border. Her message was powerful! Her ammunition was hard to ignore! She had a group of snowmobile club people hypnotized with compelling facts that we indeed had, at the very least "transient" wolves coming through our area. She gave us phone numbers and e -mail addresses to contact her with reports of sightings, so she could drop everything, hurry up here and document what was seen to add to her expanding files of evidence. The session was followed by a question and answer segment that people asked her questions about wolves and large cats that have also been sighted in the area. Her knowledge of all things wild was very impressive, and she complemented our sincere curiosity about her obsession with endangered treasures in our "very special part" of New Hampshire.
This was a great meeting, that has been talked about many times by lots of different people since it happened, even non members of the club wanted to know if it would happen again.
Today I was pondering what to write about in my blog and upon checking my e-mail found a message form Margaret informing me the she had taken a job with the National Resources Defense Council as a wolf specialist starting right away in the Northern Rockies. E-mailing her my congrats, I re-counted the night she gave the presentation and how well she was received and was appreciated and she communicated her desire to do it again.
I, myself, have seen a wolf in the area between Pittsburg and Maine many years ago in very deep snow, while following huge tracks through deep powder. coming up over a small hill, there he was, looking at me displaying a full side view from about 50 feet away. He was on a snowmobile track and after another 200 feet he found a set of his tracks leading off trail and was gone! I will never forget that encounter even though it was in the mid 80's. I have also talked to several local residents in their late eighties who tell me of seeing "large cats with long tales and light brown fur" not once but twice in the area of East Inlet.
I feel another non-boring club meeting in the works, and couldn't be more excited about the prospect.
What are your thoughts on the existence of wolves and big cats among us in New England....................?
Thursday, August 2, 2007
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6 comments:
Geesh Armand, crack open another bottle...your tall tales are getting taller all the time!
I'm patiently awaiting your next blog entry.
ckf
Armand, well we were talking about this on Sat, I was gonna bring up the fact that big cats have been also spotted in NH and not so far north, I have a friend that lives in Boscowen he has seen signs of the big cats! He has told me that the Fish and Game deney that they are here! I wonder why that is?
Rad
I have seen what I believe to be a wolf just last year on trail 5 just south of east inlet on a spring day, one of the last ridiable days of last season. I have seen wolvs in capitivty and the thing i saw looked like the real M'coy
REV-ED
I swear I saw one on 1st conn lake back in '96 or so. I would love to have seen Margarets presentation to confirm in my mind what I had come across. Basically a large white or grey dog crossing the lake way out in the middle late one afternoon. Any thoughts?
Paul D
Armand, i remember the time we went fly fishing at East Inlet.... it must have been around 2001 or so and came upon those cat tracks that were within the moose tracks along the trail next to the river.
Larry F
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