A new life for 29 rescued wolf dogs
Lori Lindner, co-founder and president of the Lockwood Valley Animal Rescue Center in the Los Padres National Forest, gets acquainted with one of the 29 wolf dogs she and her husband, Matthew Simmons, relocated to the sanctuary after they were seized from a roadside attraction near Anchorage.
See full story (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
The animals were seized by authorities as evidence in an ongoing criminal investigation and scheduled for destruction before the Lockwood Valley Animal Rescue Center intervened.
Wolf
See full story (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
A newly relocated wolf dog casts a shadow while pacing in its enclosure.The Humane Society of the United States has taken a hard stand against wolf dogs as unpredictable, destructive and rarely trainable. At least 16 states ban them, and California and 20 other states have restrictions on ownership.
See full story (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
Lindner helps a wolf dog get acclimated to its new environment. Crossing wolves, which have been bred by nature for millions of years to be wild, with dogs, which have been genetically manipulated for thousands of years to serve humans, creates a conflict of innate behaviors.
See full story (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
Advertisement
Veteran Stanley McDonald, left, and Chris Craft measure wood for a gate they are working on in newly constructed enclosures for the relocated hybrids. “I see a lot of myself in these animals,” said McDonald, who was diagnosed with severe
See full story (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
Matthew Simmons gets a nip on his goatee from one of the wolf dogs. “No more pain,” said Simmons, 38, of the hybrids. “They’re getting along amazingly well, although there have been a few tussles in which one girl pushed another girl around. But overall, they honestly seem to understand that this is a better environment than where they came from.”
See full story (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)
Coast Guard veteran Lillyin Love tries to coax newly relocated wolf dogs to eat poultry from her hand. Because of their histories, size, strength and often unstable temperaments, the animals need lots of care. The nonprofit International Fund for Animal Welfare donated $43,000 to construct nine new enclosures with 10-foot-high fencing.
See full story (Brian van der Brug / Los Angeles Times)