Portrait of Takaya and his connection to the ecosystem he called home on Thlchess (Discovery Island). Proceeds raise money for the Raincoast's Protect Wolves campaign.
Takaya was shot and killed in March 2020, making him one of the approximately 1200 wolves legally recreationally hunted each year in British Columbia. More recently, an entire pack of wolves in Sooke was purposely wiped out by a single hunter. It is time to end the outdated and unsustainable regulations that allow this to continue. From Raincoast,
"The question is not whether killing wolves is “sustainable,” as wildlife managers are always trying to assert. The question is whether it is ecologically, ethically, or even economically defensible to kill large numbers of predators anywhere. The answer on all counts is no: there are no reasonable ecological reasons to kill wolves, there are no valid economic reasons, and clearly there are no tenable ethical reasons."
Visit raincoast.org/wolves to send an email to the Minister of Environment and Climate Change Strategy letting them know you support ending the hunting and trapping of BC's wolves.
Print Details:
11x14 in
High quality, archival grade, giclee paper prints.
Limited edition run of 200.
Prints come numbered and signed.
This is a pre-order, meaning prints will be ordered from the printer after they are sold. From order date to date of shipping should be approximately two weeks.