Young Duck Hunter Forced to Shoot Attacking Wolf

Wolves from game camera in Wisconsin, courtesy Dean Weingarten

On Saturday, September 21, 2024, Chase Melton shot a wolf in defense of self and others. There were several witnesses. It happened near the town of St. Germain, Wisconsin, a township in the North Woods about 20 miles from the border of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. A township is usually six by six miles square.

Chase is 19 years old. He and several of his younger friends had risen early to hunt ducks and geese. They arrived at their chosen location at about 3:45 a.m. on opening day. They set up their blinds and threw out their decoys just before it became legal to shoot. Sunrise was at 6:42, but it started getting light at early around 6:15 am.  One fourteen-year-old in the group saw what he thought was a deer. Chase stood up and looked. It was a wolf. Melton made noise to scare the wolf off. The wolf looked at him and started moving faster toward the group. From wjfw.com:

“So, I grabbed my gun just in case something would happen,” said Melton. “Then, the 13-year-old who was two people down from me said ‘Chase right behind you!’ I looked, and we had a wolf at about five yards – I probably could have touched it with my hand, that was extremely scary. So now, we’re really panicking were like alright were surrounded we have a wolf charging us right now.” Said Melton.

A witness that was hunting 300 feet away reported seeing at least five wolves surrounding the young hunters’ blind and another four in the general area. The witness also reported hearing barks, growls and howls coming from the wolves surrounding the young hunters’ blind.

“This wolf got within 15 yards and I’m like he’s still coming, he’s still coming, he got withing 8-10 yards and it’s not what I wanted to do but to protect us and to protect them we felt harmed, so I pulled the trigger,” said Melton.

Melton fired one shot, close range at the wolf’s face using a 12-gauge loaded with non-toxic waterfowl load.

“This wolf that was five yards behind us went off into the woods, came down, and then grabbed this wolf that I shot by the neck and started dragging it off. I’ve never witnessed something like that.”

Cannibalism of members of their own pack has commonly been recorded when wolves are severely wounded or killed if the pack is hungry.  With nine members, this pack may be hungry. September is usually a good month for wolves to gain weight for the winter. No snow yet, and all the young animals that survived the summer are still available.

This defense against wolves incident was about 97 miles from the furthest north incident, in Bayfield County, which happened on Christmas or 2023. It was about 92 miles from the February 2024 wolf incident near Hayward and about 122 miles north of the two more wolf incidents south of Wisconsin Rapids, which happened in 2015.

The wolf population in Wisconsin has been growing rapidly. The original target of 350 wolves was surpassed long ago. The population is considerably more than 1,000. Under the far left Evers administration, the Department of Natural Resources has created a new wolf plan, without any population limit. The legislature demanded a limit. Governor Evers vetoed the bill on March 29, 2024.


About Dean Weingarten:

Dean Weingarten has been a peace officer, a military officer, was on the University of Wisconsin Pistol Team for four years, and was first certified to teach firearms safety in 1973. He taught the Arizona concealed carry course for fifteen years until the goal of Constitutional Carry was attained. He has degrees in meteorology and mining engineering, and retired from the Department of Defense after a 30 year career in Army Research, Development, Testing, and Evaluation.

Dean Weingarten

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Matt in Oklahoma

Good thing there were witnesses because they never trust what hunters say.
Despite what game rangers will tell you having some slugs and buckshot in a pocket isn’t wrong.

Jack

I had several Coywolfs surround me while cutting a deer up. They were very resistent to be shooed off like the smaller coyotes. This was in the suburbs.

Raysncane

I have a nephew who is a deputy with the Douglas County sheriff’s dept. The wolf population there has gotten to the point where he can no longer take his morning jog without having a sidearm with him. His wife refuses to walk their dog anymore because they have been stalked on several occasions, including midday strolls. His department gets several calls a week about the wolves prowling about the neighborhoods looking for easy prey and a missing pet here and there. And yes, our feckless governor keeps appointing his tree hugging lackey friends to the top positions of the… Read more »

safcrkr

This happened in my “neighborhood”. I know one of the witnesses (a local hunting & fishing guide who was hunting with his adult sons) and I know the uncle & aunt of the kid who shot the wolf. He is 19, a good kid, in school to become a lineman for the local utility company (WPS), and he took his two 13 year old cousins along for their first time duck hunting, just to watch (they were unarmed). There were anywhere from 7 to 12 wolves in the immediate area, surrounding 2 duck blinds on the banks of the WI… Read more »

Montana454Casull

Why stop at 1 illegally introduced Canadian wolf , this is nothing more than an evasive species introduced by federal bucket biologists to create environmental vandalism. Smoke the whole pack

swmft

wait till the wolves start moving into the cities and eating pets and people , will return to kill as many as you can