Posted on 06/23/2009 5:35:27 PM PDT by SJackson
Dachshund survives wolf attack
Jada is a 15-pound hero. The eight-year-old dauchsund hurled itself at a wolf June 9 to save a fellow canine, Lana.
By: Maria Lockwood, Superior Telegram

Jada, an eight year old dachshund, has many staples in her back after being attacked on June 9th by a wolf at her South Range home. She was rushed to the Superior Animal Shelter and is now recovering at home. (Jed Carlson/jcarlson@superiortelegram.com) OfferVideo Jada is a 15-pound hero. The eight-year-old dauchsund hurled itself at a wolf June 9 to save a fellow canine, Lana.
Their owner, Dana Lundeen, was sitting on the front porch of her South Range home that afternoon when first Lana, than Jada ran barking around the house. Suddenly, she heard an awful bark. Rounding the corner of the house, she saw a wolf about 75 yards away at the edge of the yards man-made pond. As Lundeen watched, it punted 1-year-old Lana away and grabed Jada in its mouth. She ran toward them, yelling.
I was screaming my lungs out, hoping he would drop her and he did, Lundeen said. As the wounded dog ran back toward the house, the wolf took a few steps in Lundeens direction, than padded away.
It happened so fast, she said. I was more worried about my dog than anything.
Lundeen wrapped the bleeding dog in a blanket and called her 17-year-old son, Devin, home from Northwestern High School to help.
I didnt know if Id have to shoot her, Lundeen said. I mean, her stomachs hanging out. He says Well mom, is she alive? Well, yeah. He said, Well, then theres hope.
They drove to Superior Animal Hospital, where the dauchsund spent 3½ hours in surgery.
They are awesome people there, Lundeen said.
The wounds were similar to those seen when a larger dog attacks a smaller one, said veterinarian Bob McClellan. The internal wounds are 10 times worse than what it looks like from the outside.
Jada suffered crushed ribs, a spleen that was split in two, a collapsed lung and a left kidney that had been pulled away from the abdominal wall, he said.
The veterinarian was able to repair Jada, inside and out. After that, it was up to the dauchsund.
The dogs a tough little dog, McClellan said. She hung in there.
Sunday, she returned home to South Range.
Shes full of many, many staples, Lundeen said, affectionately calling the dog Frankenweinie.
Lana was uninjured.
Surprising development
Lundeen was born and raised in South Range, although the family moved to their current residence on the Lundeen Road off of County Highway V in October. Deer, coyotes, foxes, geese and more cross the 64-acre property regularly. Still, the wolf came as a surprise.
I never thought one would come that close, she said, especially at 1 p.m. in broad daylight.
As the population of gray or timber wolves in the state continues to rise, so do the number of attacks, or depredations. A winter 2008 survey by the Wisconsin DNR puts the number of wolves in Wisconsin at between 626 to 662, nearly 100 more than the previous year. Most of them live in the north.
Douglas County has some of the highest density of wolf populations in the state, said Adrian Wydevan, a DNR mammal ecologist based out of Park Falls.
The northwestern county was the first spot wolves returned to in 1975, slipping across the border from Minnesota. Today, more than 20 wolf packs roam in Douglas County, according to the DNRs winter 2007-08 report on gray wolf distribution. Packs range in size from two to seven members, with one of the largest in the area being the Crotte River Pack in Parkland.
The wolf population shouldnt be a cause for alarm, Wydevan said.
They are mostly shy, living out their lives in the forest, he said. They thin out deer and beaver populations, keeping trout streams open and forests healthy. Like bobcats and bear, they tend to stay under the radar, an invisible presence.
But sometimes, the two worlds collide.
Last year, we had seven cases of dogs attacked near peoples homes, Wydevan said. One died, the others were only injured. That was mostly due to owners who were close enough to scare the wolves away.
McClellan noted that the amount of damage the wolf did to Jada with one bite was incredible.
If the wolf had had a second bite, the dog would have been done, he said. Fortunately Dana was there when it happened.
Thirty farms throughout the state lost 43 cattle and one sheep to wolf depredation last year, Wydevan said, and there were 21 reported cases of hunting hounds being attacked. All but one of those were fatal because the dogs were hunting far from their owners.
A dog attack near a home could be caused by a lone wolf or one on a hunting foray for the pack, Wydevan said. A wolf could see a small dog as prey, or view domestic canines as rivals for territory.
He urged dog owners to keep an eye out for wolf signs tracks or long, cyclidrical scat filled with deer hair and steer clear of those areas. Owners should keep dogs close, within 100 yards or less, and call to them frequently to scare predators off, Wydevan said. Leashes and bells are also options.
If an attack happens, residents are asked to call the USDA Wildlife Services Program at (800) 228-1368. The USDA deals with problem bears, wolves and birds. A day after the South Range attack, a USDA representative came to Lundeens home and set up wolf traps. They will stay up for 10 days, Lundeen said. Traps are effective in about half of the depredation cases, Wydevan said. If the wolf isnt caught, he said, chances are the encounter was an isolated incident.
If someone notices a wolf acting unusually out in the daytime or showing no fear of people they can call the local DNR station in Brule, (715) 372-4866 or Superior (715) 392-7988.
Both Lundeen and McClellan are hopeful Jada will recover. The dog has already survived being run over by a four-wheeler and a three-month period where it was paralyzed.
Dog with nine lives, Lundeen said with a smile.
But Jada still refuses to return to the edge of the pond. Wednesday, the dauchsund hid under a picnic table next to the house while Lana and three-year-old Deja Mu frisked through the grass. And Lundeen continues to watch them carefully. She knows there are wolves around.
I just never expected them in my back yard is all, Lundeen said.
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Wow. It’s amazing she survived. Good dog! Brave dog! I’m going to go hug my dogs... :)

get a bigger dog, for chrissakes. Especially since you know the wolves are around now.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kangal_Dog
That would have been one dead wolf real quick.
I was tempted to add my own comment, shoot the wolf before calling the USDA (???-I thought the DNR was the appropriate agency.), possibly use a shovel and don’t call anyone.
Yes, thanks to the vet and I’m glad they could afford the treatment. We need National Petcare.
Simple solution: Shoot wolf; put carcass in woodchipper; have a cold beer.
Why haven't they been increaseing at 25% every year. They have it is just that the DNR refuses to acknowledge it. If they did the true population would be in the 1500 to 2000 range. There were close to 3 times off the numbers on black bears saying there were 13000 for years now the new studies are showing upwards of 40000 plus.
The tree huggers in Madison get very upset with the idea of a wolf hunting season. We in the north would truly love one. There is hardly a patch of woods after a new snow that one doesn't find fresh wolf tracks nearby.
I have heard of several dogs being grabbed and more then one story of cows and other live stock being killed a wolf well eat any thing it can catch and kill.
Cool story.
We had a Dachshund. She passed away a couple months ago. I never liked her, but my wife loved the heck out of the little creep.
One thing for sure, those little rats have the heart of a lion.
I had raised Dobermans and even the most ALFA among them was submissive to her. She would hang out with them, sleep with them in a dog pile and play in the fields with the Dobermans, but there was never any question as to who the boss was. I was fun to watch.
Brave munchkins, they are. ;>)
“We need National Petcare.”
Um. Let me think about it. No. LOL!
Yes, they’re well down into the central/south central part of the state, a couple dozen miles from Madison. I’m sure they’ll be welcomed with open arms.
Yeah you;d have to bury it quick probably, unless the area you lived in wasn’t hyper about that. And preferably bury it on your neighbor’s property somewhere obscure. The neighbor you don’t get along with well.
Over the years, my folks had 6 dachshunds. They were great 'til they got old. Then they tended to bite a bit.
I didn't post this, enough local stuff for tonight, and animals are more fun than politics, but feel free to post it if you like.
Wisconsin's uninsured adults get a lift with BadgerCare Plus Core Plan
They seem like nice people, and it's nice the state picks up the $60 application fee. And I do think people without employer benefits should be able to PURCHASE insurance, something states handle fine for autos and homeowners. But unless I'm missing something, there's no mention of the participants paying anything, that comes from taxpayers.
So why can't I have National Petcare?
Now that they're into cap and trade, I'm waiting for the right article to demand credits for the CO2 by trees consume. Applies to you too, one mature tree covers 2 humans for a year.
If companies are going to pay the government for producing CO2, people with trees should be paid for their CO2 absorbtion.
“If companies are going to pay the government for producing CO2, people with trees should be paid for their CO2 absorption.”
I’ve planted 150 shade trees, fruit trees & various shrubs on my farm these past 15 years.
I’m all in!
They were bred for that, to minimize injury, since they were used to hunt badgers or badger-like creatures, and the short legs were useful to actually go down into the hole to their den.
Anything that would confront a badger in it's den is not afraid of anything, lol.
Well I know I almost hit one running across I 94 by Tomah a few years back Ft. Mc coy has a growing population of them.
Mani ping
There is a reason wolves were nearly wipped out years ago and we are probably about to find out what having scavenger wolves around can do again. If they are taking small dogs from a yard then small children won’t be put a few years away.
They are too cute! We have a mini...he’s so spoiled. In fact, I’m rocking him like a baby right now. hahaha.
And he barks and growls at everyone that is not family. We rescued him so he’s quite attached to us.
Why I thought wolves were gentle, kind creatures who must be kept on an “endangered list”?
Too funny! Love em both!
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