Native Wolf Spirit

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Difference by colourNot in mother's love❤️❤️
04/26/2026

Difference by colour
Not in mother's love❤️❤️

I want to see 500 hi from real wolf lovers.
04/26/2026

I want to see 500 hi from real wolf lovers.


A quiet moment of love in the wild
04/26/2026

A quiet moment of love in the wild

If you like this,Do you agree..?? 🤔
04/23/2026

If you like this,Do you agree..?? 🤔

Pure Love ❤️
04/22/2026

Pure Love ❤️

Excellent photography❤️🙏🙏🙏
04/22/2026

Excellent photography❤️🙏🙏🙏

The sky lowers itself.
02/16/2026

The sky lowers itself.

This is Jeff Reed of the Cry Wolf Project standing next to the last two wolves ever shot inside Yellowstone in the 1920s...
02/14/2026

This is Jeff Reed of the Cry Wolf Project standing next to the last two wolves ever shot inside Yellowstone in the 1920s — a mother wolf and her adolescent pup. They were killed in 1926 during the government’s extermination programme, when wolves were labelled “varmints” and systematically removed from the landscape. When the mother fell, her pup reportedly ran back to defend her… and was shot too. With their deaths, Yellowstone fell silent.
No howls. No packs. No balance.
Just 70 years of silence.

Behind them in this image is a spectrogram of the Rescue Creek wolves howling at their den in 2023 — the living proof of what restoration can achieve. These voices exist only because wolves were finally reintroduced in 1995, sparking one of the world’s most famous ecological recoveries.

Thank you to Yellowstone National Park for loaning this powerful piece of history to the Livingston, Montana Museum for their upcoming sound exhibit celebrating the HOWL. Visitors will even be able to hear some of the first recorded howls from 1995, echoing across the park after decades of absence.

A stark reminder:
We nearly lost the wolf once. We must never let history repeat itself.

A beautiful wolf held within light and distance.Recently photographed during a project in Ladakh, one of the regions in ...
02/13/2026

A beautiful wolf held within light and distance.

Recently photographed during a project in Ladakh, one of the regions in India closest to my heart.

Sweden currently manages around 350 wolves.
Italy lives with over 3,000. Spain with more than 300 established packs, translating to well over 2,500 individuals.

In the high-altitude landscapes of Ladakh and northern India, Himalayan wolves persist in far harsher conditions, with only a few hundred individuals across vast regions, yet coexistence is still treated as a responsibility, not a threat.

Many countries manage much larger predator populations than Sweden, often with greater ecological maturity and long-term perspective.

I’m Swedish, as you might know, and I dare say: in Sweden, we like to believe we are the best at a lot of things. When it comes to stewarding predators and living ecosystems, that belief is hard to defend.

For nearly 40 years, I have worked closely with many of the world’s most powerful terrestrial and marine predators, and I know for a fact:

…the wolf is not the problem.
How we choose to live with it is.


02/09/2026

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