Duck!

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Our wolf hybrids are a brother and sister named Cheyenne and Dakota.  They are 75% Canadian Timber Wolf and 25% Siberian Husky.  Our house is like a camp site because they’re so leggy they can reach any food or drink left just about anywhere.  Their diet is mostly bison.  I do think they consider themselves somewhat domesticated hunters though, as they are always on the prowl for food — when they’re not sleeping that is.  Being the owner and operator of a pet sitting business, around the holidays it’s a zoo.  Poor babies; it’s like the cobbler’s children who have no shoes.  I came home after a long day of work to find their bowls were empty.  One of them had put their beloved duck in their dish as a not so subtle message.  I guess they were in a fowl mood.  😉  So I shuffled off for buffalo, and they wolfed down their food.  As sweet as they are, I do not recommend having these beautiful animals as pets.  My connection with wolves is deep and I consider our wolf dogs to be ambassadors for their brethren in the wild.

“I’ve always said that the best wolf habitat resides in the human heart.  You have to leave a little space for them to live.” ~ Former U.S. Wolf Recovery Chief Ed Bangs

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