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Colorado
Colorado has more wolves, but would you know one if you saw one? Here is what to know
Colorado releases wolves from Oregon
Colorado Parks and Wildlife captured 10 wolves in northeast Oregon and released them in Grand and Summit counties in late December 2023 as the initial stage of its reintroduction plan.
Confirmation of dead wolves in Larimer and Elbert counties in recent weeks has only heightened public awareness that wide-wandering wolves can show up anywhere in Colorado.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife has received hundreds of calls and wolf sighting reports in recent years.
Those sightings could increase this summer, as Colorado has more wolves on the landscape after reintroducing 10 in late December in recreation-heavy Grand and Summit counties, and as the weather warms and more people head outdoors to recreate.
Still, your chances are slim to see a wolf but here are things you should know about wolves and recreating:
Could you distinguish between a wolf and coyote? They look similar. Here are telltale differences
Here are the differences, according to Colorado Parks and Wildlife:
- Wolves are about twice the size of coyotes. However, smaller wolves can be about the same size as larger coyotes.
- Wolves can measure up to 6 feet in length, including the tail, and stand approximately 30 inches in height at the shoulder. Females usually weigh 70 to 80 pounds, while males weigh 95 to more than 100 pounds.
- Coyotes typically measure up to 4 feet in length, including tail, and stand closer to 18 inches in height at the shoulder. They generally weigh 15 to 45 pounds.
- Wolves have larger and blockier snouts/muzzles and shorter and more rounded ears than coyotes, which have longer, narrower features.
- Wolves have distinctively bushier and shorter tails than coyotes.
- Wolf tracks are about 5 inches long by 4 inches wide, with four symmetrical toes and identifiable claws.
- Coyote tracks are similar but are about half that size.
- Wolf track paths usually show a direct, purposeful route.
How to report a wolf sighting and what to include in the report
Colorado Parks and Wildlife has a wolf sighting form and receives hundreds of reports and calls a year with people claiming to have seen a wolf.
The agency received six confirmed wolf sightings between 2004 and 2019. The latter year was when what became the breeding female of the North Park pack was discovered in Jackson County.
Since that breeding female and male naturally migrated into Jackson County and gave birth to six pups in spring of 2021, confirmed sightings have increased.
The agency encourages reporting of wolf sightings.
Here are important elements when reporting a sighting:
- Clear video and/or photos, while making sure to keep a safe distance.
- Photograph or video the tracks and measure them, placing an easily identifiable object next to the tracks.
What to do if you and your pet encounter a wolf
Wolves pose little risk to humans but some risk to dogs, which they see as competition for prey and as encroaching on their territory.
Here are safety tips when recreating:
- Make lots of noise if you come and go when wolves are most active — dusk to dawn.
- Dogs should be leashed or under strict voice control while recreating.
- Bear spray can be effective in warding off an attack.
- Keep dogs close to your home during the day and bring them inside at night.
In the extremely rare case that you encounter a wolf:
- Keep visual contact with the animal.
- Keep your dog away from the wolf.
- Face the wolf but slowly move away (don’t run or bend down) to seek shelter.
- If it approaches you, make yourself look larger by raising your hands, make loud noises and wave an object such as a hiking stick in front of you.
- If attacked, fight back using your fingers or sharp objects on the wolf’s most sensitive areas, including underbelly, face and eyes.
Where might you encounter a wolf in Colorado?
The reintroduction of wolves has increased their presence in Colorado and wolves wander widely.
Confirmed sightings of naturally migrating and released wolves stretch from the West Slope to the Eastern Plains.
A dead wolf was discovered in Larimer County on April 18.
The wolf found dead in Elbert County in eastern Colorado on April 3 was discovered through blood samples to have wandered from Michigan or Wisconsin.
The highest concentration of wolves remains in the general vicinity of their initial release sites in Grand and Summit counties. That is where the majority of recent wolf depredations on livestock have taken place.
Colorado Parks and Wildlife has released four monthly wolf activity maps showing watersheds in which its 12 wolves (11 after the deceased wolf in Larimer County) were detected travelling via pins from their GPS tracking collars.
The latest map recorded wolf movements March 26 through April 23. That map showed notable movement of a wolf or wolves in Larimer County, expanding eastward in watersheds encompassing roughly the western three-fourths of Larimer County. Those watersheds include one that reaches just east of U.S. Highway 287 north of Fort Collins and another south to U.S. Highway 34 west of Loveland.
It’s important to note with the watershed map that watersheds can be quite large. Also, if a collar or collars pings in a watershed, the entire watershed is marked as having a wolf or wolves in it at some point in the last month. It does not necessarily mean a wolf or wolves are currently in those areas.
Colorado
Boulder officer hurt in response to woman with knife
Boulder Police Department arrested a woman with a knife inside a store on Wednesday evening. She was taken into custody around 8 p.m.
Officers are asking the public to avoid the area of 3900 block of Broadway in North Boulder as they investigate a report of a woman inside a store with a knife.
An officer was reportedly injured during the incident and was taken to the hospital for treatment while one person was now “safely in custody.” The officer reportedly has non-life threatening injuries.
CBS News Colorado will continue to provide updates on the incident.
Colorado
Coach Prime, son belittle CU transfer, FCS player
Colorado coach Deion Sanders and his son, quarterback Shedeur Sanders, have gone on the offensive on social media after a story ran about how former Buffaloes players fared after many were run off following the arrival of “Coach Prime.”
Former Colorado safety Xavier Smith told the Athletic in a story published Monday that Deion Sanders “never even tried to get to know me,” and that he “was destroying guys’ confidence and belief in themselves.”
Shedeur Sanders posted to X, formerly Twitter, that he didn’t remember who Smith was.
“Bro had to be very mid at best,” Shedeur Sanders posted, insinuating Smith was only an average player.
Smith, who had injury trouble in his short time at Colorado, earned freshman All-America honors at FCS Austin Peay in 2023 and has since followed coach Scotty Walden to UTEP.
After Shedeur Sanders’ tweet, things escalated into a series of back-and-forth trash talk.
Colorado receiver Kaleb Mathis posted a video of himself getting the better of Smith in a practice last spring, to which Smith’s Austin Peay teammate, Jaheim Ward, noted that Mathis had just 38 receiving yards last season.
That tweet led to Ward’s career stats at the FCS school (36 tackles over the past three seasons) getting posted, prompting Coach Sanders to weigh in Wednesday, stating “Lawd Jesus” above a screenshot of Ward’s stats.
Deion Sanders’ tweet taking aim at the relatively anonymous FCS player was viewed more than 12 million times since it was posted. He also clapped back at another X user who took issue with Shedeur’s social media behavior and pointed out Colorado’s 4-8 record last year.
“He will be a top 5 pick,” Deion Sanders said of his son. “Where yo son going ? Lololol I got time today. Lololol.”
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