{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "Wolf extermination is land improvement", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/124612823438/", "html": "<h1>Wolf extermination is land improvement</h1><p>So after a long and overwhelmingly successful campaign to exterminate wolves in America we\u2019re starting to actively try to reverse course and reestablish wolves in the wild. And part of that involves retrospectively casting the earlier extermination efforts as the product of some sort of misguided fear or ignorance but bitch please, we knew exactly what we were doing, it was cold, pragmatic land improvement.</p><p>Now, our stock image of \u201cland improvement\u201d is agricultural - grading land flat, draining wetlands, adding irrigation, so as to enable it to produce more crops. You\u2019ll remember that a lot of the formal ideology of American settler-colonial land appropriation was that the native inhabitants didn\u2019t have ownership of the land because they hadn\u2019t made it theirs by performing such land improvements, and were instead something like long-term vagrants.</p><p>(As a side-note, in early America land clearance was effectively free or even profitable if you were tied into the transatlantic economy - a landowner could hire a gang of men to chop down the trees on his plot and then immediately pay for the effort by reselling the wood, depending on the local markets and geography either raw as fuel or construction material, or instead processed into lumber, furniture components or [in the deep woods where transport was toughest] by burning to ash for use in lye manufacture. Keep in mind that in this period wood <a href=\"/post/44773345549/\" target=\"_blank\">was quite dear</a> back in Europe, while in the New World it basically grew on trees.)</p><p>Now, as you\u2019ll know if you followed <a href=\"http://siikr.tumblr.com/\" target=\"_blank\">my recommendation</a> to read Changes in the Land, American natives actually did perform extensive operations on land to improve its productivity, but were often overlooked in this because what they were optimizing weren\u2019t the familiar forms of either manorial or smallholder agrarianism. The classic example is setting regular forest fires, which cleared out underbrush and allowed for fresh green growth, thus increasing the carrying capacity for game like deer, thus increasing the productivity for hunting and gathering.</p><p>(Another side-note: you see similar if less intentional dynamics today. When people talk about deer-human conflict - car crashes, nibbled gardens, etc. - as a result of humans pressuring deer through invading their habitat that\u2019s exactly wrong. That stuff gets worse as exurban development continues because humans are creating new deer habitat. The deep woods are too tangled and impassible for deer and don\u2019t have enough sunlight to support nibbling-height plant growth. Plains are better food-wise but too vulnerable - deer escape predators by bounding over undergrowth that predators can\u2019t follow through. So their ideal habitat are edgelands - lightly wooded areas, ideally with access to marginally more and less overgrown regions. And exurban development functionally creates edgeland.)</p><p>So once a few years ago I took <a href=\"/post/87864005683/\" target=\"_blank\">Blue Bitch</a> from Portland to Missoula and back, for a cousin\u2019s wedding. Got a few good stories out of that. Did you see <a href=\"https://t.umblr.com/redirect?z=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F2015%2F07%2F04%2Fus%2Fassignment-america-sandpoint-idaho.html&amp;t=MzViMGRlN2IxMjhhYzI2ZmVmZWMxZmJiODhlNmMwNzQ3OTBmOTVlMSxkNmYxM2M2NzA2ZDhkYWExYWQ1YmI1YmRiMTA3NGJmZGYyYjQ1Y2Ri\" target=\"_blank\">that New York Times package</a>? I should tell you my Sandpoint story sometime.</p><p>And back in Portland OR-7 had been in the news, this wolf with a tracker that was the first wolf known in Western Oregon for more than half a century, and he wandered down around to California (first known for nearly a whole) and against all odds found a mate and birthed a litter, real heartwarming story. But after I crossed over the Cascades range, and intensifying as I continued east into Idaho and Montana, I started to run into merchandise, on gas station shelves, pickup truck bumpers, locals\u2019 torsos, that all ran around themes like Fuck Wolves; or Kill Wolves; Wolves Can Go To Hell; Kill All Fucking Wolves, Who Can Go To Fucking Hell, And Then The Fucking Wolf-Loving Hippies Too. I was actually a little impressed at how many variations on the theme they managed to pull off.</p><p>Because wolf extermination was land improvement. Like, we knew wolves were apex predators and important to the functioning of the natural ecosystem when we killed them, THAT\u2019S WHY WE KILLED THEM. By killing the apex predators we became the apex predators, and wolf-cleared lands became much more productive for hunting. The state government of Alaska sends helicopters out to kill wolfpacks every year for this exact reason, to enrich the hunting prospects. (A substantial share of the Alaska population derives a nontrivial portion of their yearly diet from wild game.) By replacing the apex predator with ourselves we allowed for animal husbandry - livestock raising - which is essentially hunting plus low time preference.</p><p>It wasn\u2019t because we were afraid of them although their reputation as mankillers (mostly lone forest travelers in prey-scarce seasons) sure didn\u2019t fucking help their cause, it was an economic decision. We killed them as an act of land improvement, to raise the yield of hunting and animal husbandry. </p><p>Now of course animal husbandry and hunting don\u2019t provide as much calories per acre as intensive agrarianism, but they\u2019re still perfectly viable for regions with lower population densities or ill-suited to agriculture - soil too rocky or acidic, insufficient water, no easy transportation to markets for low-value, high-volume bulk products.</p><p>And this - the mountainous terrain of eastern Oregon into the Rockies - was hunting and animal husbandry land, this was the land, the culture, the economy made viable by wolf extermination, and so I\u2019m not surprised they said Fuck You to wolves and wolf reintroduction, because wolf reintroduction was basically saying Fuck You to them.</p><p>After I found a hotel for a night I ended up in a bar, struck up a conversation with a local, wanted to know what it was like from that side. It was basically like you\u2019d expect - that the government that acted in their name had abandoned the duty of protecting their livelihood from predators was improper, that it would actively try to stop them from protecting themselves was repugnant. She attributed it to city folk in Portland who couldn\u2019t imagine what it was like to be a farmer. (Nearby Idaho, for example, started annual wolf hunts as soon as federal protection as \u201cendangered species\u201d was lifted.)</p><p>I said that wasn\u2019t true, Portland\u2019s the earthiest city I know, people are very in touch with the land and the truth of fundamental production, there are <i>lots</i> of people who can imagine what it\u2019s like to be a farmer.</p><p>And let that sit a beat and then delivered the punchline: \u2026there\u2019s just more people who can imagine what it\u2019s like to be a wolf.</p><p>Which is it, really, that for all the foofaraw what we\u2019re doing is actively and intentionally degrading a functional segment of our polity in the name and interests of those not only not our countrymen but not even our species, and when they ask why we would do this, and what we\u2019re offering in return we basically tell them - they who actually fucking know from wolves - \u201cwell, it\u2019s <i>really</i> cool to think of yourself as a wolf\u201d.</p><p>She also said Portlanders wouldn\u2019t be so positive if <i>they</i> were the ones who had to deal with the consequences. Which is completely correct. In LA <i>and</i> Portland, I\u2019ve seen some of the greenest, circle-of-life ecology types get <i>quite</i> tetchy about coyotes sneaking into their yards and eviscerating their housepets. Their precious social media star reduced to a mess of fur and blood, the skull\u2019s hard to chew so they often leave the head intact, dangling off a stripped spinal cord.</p><p>And yeah when a farmer comes across a calf like that okay maybe it\u2019s not ~a member of his family~, instead it\u2019s just his job and his retirement and college savings accounts. So hey.</p>"}