Project Appleseed

Your Appleseed State Board => Illinois => Topic started by: Castle Mountain on March 20, 2010, 11:15:45 PM

Title: APPLESEED & THE WOLF CREDO
Post by: Castle Mountain on March 20, 2010, 11:15:45 PM
Having grown up, worked and hiked in pure Alberta wolf country, I have enjoyed a few wonderful wilderness encounters ( nothing dramatic, just magical ).
I am personally very devoted to this animal. I have a print above my desk of a mated pair,  an Alpha male and Alpha female standing together,
as a pair of silent sentinels in the midsts of a birch wood forest. The title 'Wilderness Companions by Randy Fehr."
When I read this article  I could  not help but feel this is so apropos to Appleseed, I felt compelled to share especially because of these hard times, with
what our country is going through and the blessings we all enjoy because of Appleseed.  What ever we will experience during these uncertain times
we remain vigilant as the wolf with regard to devotion to God, each other, our mission and with our rapid growth we have these thoughts to be mindful of.

I hope you  enjoy it O0

CM



    Excerpt from:
   Wisdom of Wolves,
    by Twyman Towery

    No other mammal shows more spirited devotion to its family, organization or social group than the wolf. The members of the wolf pack hunt together to insure survival of the group, but they also play, sing, sleep, scuffle and protect each other. A wolf's purpose for existing is to insure the survival of the pack.

    A wolf pack is made up of parents, aunts, uncles, brothers, sisters, half brothers and half sisters - it is truly an extended family organization. And though generally only the Alpha male and Alpha female produce pups, every member of the pack participates in the nurturing and education of the young. Each pack member assumes responsibility for the food, shelter, training, protection and play where the pups are concerned, for the pack realizes that the young are their future.

    The loyalty exhibited between wolves is well known and documented. But a Montana man who has used his summers for years to study wolves in Alaska gave me a different view of wolf loyalty. He told about a couple he knew who lived in an extremely remote area with their two sons in a log cabin they had made by hand. This family also included two wolves they had raised from earliest puppyhood, rescuing them from their den after their mother had been indiscriminately shot and the pups left to die. This was the only family the wolves had ever known, having only lived with humans as their pack mates.

    One day the parents were cutting wood about a mile from home when one of the boys accidentally turned over a kerosene lamp (there was no electricity), and a raging fire began to consume the wooden structure. The two wolves immediately dashed toward the flaming cabin where the two boys were trapped inside, immobilized by smoke and fear. The parents were far behind, so the wolves gnawed and fought their way into the cabin and pulled the boys outside to safety. Though both wolves were badly burned, their loyalty to their "pack" meant the difference between life and death for these two members of their "pack."

(//)


    The Wolf Credo written by Del Goetz truly captures what the wolf is all about:

    Respect the elders
    Teach the young
    Cooperate with the pack.

    Play when you can
    Hunt when you must
    Rest in between.

    Share your affections
    Voice your feelings
    Leave your mark.


    © Del Goetz