| |
Local
trapper
educates
youths |
|
Kelly
Moran |
|
|
|
During
my
six
years
working
as
a
Fish
and
Wildlife
officer
in
Alberta,
I
have
had
many
unforgettable
experiences
and
encountered
many
unforgettable
people;
unfortunately,
some
of
these
remain
in
my
memory
because
of
negative
results
that
stemmed
from
negative
circumstances.
However,
the
following
story
reflects
a
positive
outcome
that
was
achieved
through
the
good
heart,
effort,
and
drive
of
one
individual
to
see
our
wildlife
resources
and
the
people
who
enjoy
them
prevail.
On
January
13,
2006,
I
received
a
complaint
from
a
local
acreage
owner
stating
that
over
the
Christmas
holidays
while
walking
along
the
creek,
one
of
her
children
found
a
fox
suffering
with
a
broken
leg
caught
in
an
illegal
leg
hold
trap.
The
child
attempted
to
spread
the
jaws
of
the
trap
and
release
the
fox,
but
was
not
strong
enough,
so
decided
to
remove
the
entire
trap
from
the
tree
and
free
the
fox,
still
dragging
the
trap
behind
it.
Upon
arriving
home
and
hearing
the
story
from
her
child,
she
called
a
neighbour
who
was
able
to
track
the
injured
fox
and
end
its
suffering.
The
ensuing
investigation
resulted
in
evidence
that
supported
charges
of
hunting
without
a
licence
contrary
to
the
Wildlife
Act,
against
two
youths
that
lived
in
the
area.
Neither
youth
had
a
Fur
Management
Licence
that
would
permit
them
to
harvest
furbearing
animals
in
Alberta.
The
regular
process
would
have
been
to
serve
the
youths
summonses
to
appear
in
provincial
court
and,
if
found
guilty,
pay
a
fine
between
zero
and
$50,000
and
serve
a
one-year
recreational
hunting
licence
suspension.
After
giving
the
matter
some
thought,
I
felt
an
alternative
approach
might
be
more
suitable.
Enter
Gordy
Klassen,
President
of
the
Alberta
Trappers
Association
(ATA),
and
senior
licence
holder
of
Registered
Fur
Management
Area
(RFMA)
72
near
Debolt,
Alberta.
I
met
Gordy
once
before,
three
years
ago
at
an
ATA
seminar
in
Edson,
where
he
was
speaking
to
our
group
regarding
some
changes
he
felt
were
necessary
for
the
ATA
to
make
to
sustain
“true”
trapping
in
Alberta.
I
was
impressed
with
what
he
was
trying
to
achieve,
encouraged
with
the
passion
and
happy
to
have
him
sitting
as
president
of
the
ATA.
Thinking
back
to
that
first
meeting,
and
considering
my
options
relating
to
the
current
situation,
I
was
confident
that
Gordy
would
be
able
to
work
with
me
to
achieve
a
positive
outcome
for
these
youths
and
influence
their
future
contributions
to
Alberta’s
natural
resources.
I
was
right!
Gordy
not
only
supported
the
enforcement
alternatives
available
to
me
under
the
Wildlife
Act
for
unique
situations
such
as
this,
he
offered
to
take
these
youths
under
his
guidance
for
an
experience
on
his
trapline.
Section
97
of
the
Wildlife
Act
gives
the
court
authority,
by
way
of
a
court
order,
to
have
an
individual
comply
with
conditions
that
the
court
considers
appropriate
for
securing
the
person’s
good
conduct
and
for
preventing
that
person
from
repeating
the
offence
or
committing
other
offences
against
the
act.
On
February
27,
2006,
both
youths
appeared
in
Grande
Prairie
Provincial
Court
and
plead
guilty
to
hunting
without
a
licence.
Rather
than
receiving
a
recreational
hunting
licence
suspension
and
being
assessed
a
fine,
Judge
J.N.G.
Mitchell
issued
a
court
order.
The
order
required
that
the
two
youths
attend
RFMA
72
with
Gordy
Klassen
for
two
full
days
between
February
28
and
March
31,
2006,
for
the
purposes
of
learning
and
observing
proper,
legal,
and
ethical
trapping
techniques
and
fur
handling
practices.
Upon
completion
of
those
two
days
on
the
trapline,
the
youths
were
required
to
complete
a
typed
essay
summarizing
their
experience
relative
to
what
put
them
into
the
current
situation
and
what
they
learned
from
it.
The
essays
were
required
to
be
completed
and
turned
in
to
me
for
review
by
June
30,
2006,
where
they
would
then
be
published
in
the
Alberta
Game
Warden
magazine,
and
the
Alberta
Trappers
Association
Magazine,
in
an
effort
to
have
other
youths
read
and
learn
from
their
experience.
The
following
are
the
essays
written
by
the
youths.
In
addition
to
the
efforts
of
Gordy
Klassen,
I
would
also
like
to
recognize
the
support
and
express
my
appreciation
of
two
local
teachers
that
took
the
time
to
review
these
essays
and
offer
some
advice
to
the
youths
in
completing
the
projects.
Thank-you
to
Valentin
Borisenko
of
Sexsmith
Secondary
School
and
to
Evelyn
Malina
of
Harry
Balfour
School.
Kelly
Moran
is
a
member
of
the
Alberta
Game
Warden
Association
in
Grande
Prairie.
|
The
path
to
discovery |
|
|
Gordy
Klassen |
|
Whenever
laws
are
broken,
where
traps
and
snares
are
involved,
there
is
usually
a
negative
impact
for
all
trappers
and
our
industry.
It
doesn’t
matter
if
the
person
who
set
the
snare
or
trap
was
a
legitimate
trapper,
a
poacher
or
from
an
animal
rights
group
with
a
fanatic
and
desperate
agenda.
In
the
public
eye
it
has
a
negative
impact
on
legitimate
trappers.
This
can
happen
even
when
no
laws
are
broken.
When
people
unfamiliar
with
trapping
stumble
across
a
set
and
find
a
trapped
animal,
or
when
a
hiker’s
dog
sticks
his
head
or
foot
into
a
legally
set
snare
or
trap,
right
or
wrong
the
impact
can
often
be
quite
negative.
Most
animal
damage
control
people,
fur
trappers
and
their
associations
are
very
sensitive
to
this.
At
the
beginning
of
February,
2006,
Fish
and
Wildlife
Officer
Kelly
Moran
called
and
told
me
that
he
had
followed
up
on
a
report
of
illegal
trapping
and
upon
investigation
had
to
charge
a
couple
of
young
fellows
with
trapping
without
a
licence.
He
said
there
were
grounds
for
other
charges
and,
although
it
was
easiest
to
write
a
summons
and
let
the
court
impose
a
sentence
and
collect
fines,
he
felt
that
these
two
young
guys
had
the
potential
to
be
good
solid
outdoorsmen
and
he
didn’t
want
to
disillusion
them.
Kelly
didn’t
say
it
but
I
think
he
took
a
liking
to
Roy
and
Al,
much
the
same
as
I
would
a
little
later
on.
Left
to
right:
Gordy
Klassen,
Al,
Roy
(identities
withheld)
and
Fish
and
Wildlife
officer
Kelly
Moran
Nevertheless,
laws
had
been
broken
and
both
Roy
and
Al
had
to
understand
the
consequences
of
acting
illegally.
Kelly
told
me
that
there
was
room
to
move
on
this
with
some
alternative
sentencing
and
asked
me
if
I
had
any
ideas
or
could
help.
I
recognized
the
problem
for
the
boys,
Kelly
and
the
negative
aspect
this
would
have
with
the
public.
But
I
also
was
well
aware
of
just
how
busy
I
was
at
that
time.
But
Kelly
was
persuasive
and
as
we
chatted
about
our
meeting
in
Edson
a
couple
years
before
and
of
his
moving
to
Grande
Prairie,
I
realized
that
Kelly,
with
his
recent
move
and
new
posting,
had
more
than
enough
to
do.
He
didn’t
need
to
be
calling
me,
but
he
wanted
to
help
a
couple
of
young
guys
who
he
thought
would
turn
out
to
be
good
trappers
someday.
It
woke
me
up
a
little.
But
as
far
as
ideas
went,
I
have
to
admit
at
first
that
I
kind
of
drew
a
blank.
Then
almost
off
handedly
I
said,
“Why
don’t
I
take
these
guys
out
on
my
trapline
for
a
couple
days.
I’ll
work
them
hard,
show
them
a
little
about
fur
handling
and
trapping
and
maybe
I
can
make
them
understand
the
consequences
that
this
has
for
all
the
hard
working
and
honest
trappers
out
there
when
someone
breaks
the
law.”
After
a
little
discussion
on
the
details,
Kelly
liked
the
idea
and
suggested
that
we
cap
the
process
with
the
boys
each
writing
an
essay
on
their
experience.
Besides
being
kind
hearted,
Kelly
is
also
a
good
PR
man
and
he
sold
me
on
the
idea.
Kelly
made
the
request
and
the
judge
sentenced
the
two
boys
to
two
days
with
me.
Meanwhile,
I
had
time
to
think
a
little
bit
about
this
and
about
my
own
past.
I
started
trapping
without
a
licence
when
I
was
eleven.
Before
that,
my
brother
Roy
and
I
had
been
shooting
squirrels
when
we
were
so
small
that
we
couldn’t
pull
the
bolt
back
on
our
old
Cooey
Model
39.
Dad
put
a
big
ball
of
tape
on
the
back
of
the
bolt
so
that
we
could
use
both
hands
to
cock
it.
For
three
years,
until
I
turned
14,
Dad
bought
a
trapping
licence
and
sold
our
fur
for
us.
Before
we
graduated
from
high
school
we
were
snowshoeing
35
miles
every
weekend,
pulling
a
toboggan
and
sleeping
in
a
lean-to
all
winter
long.
We
loved
what
we
were
doing
and
I
know
that
I
set
traps
where
I
shouldn’t
have,
but
our
enthusiasm
was
a
heck
of
a
motivator.
I
remember
one
winter
when
Fish
and
Wildlife
were
doing
an
aerial
moose
count.
My
brother
and
I
had
to
keep
an
eye
out
for
them
and
stand
under
a
tree
when
they
would
fly
at
low
level
over
us.
The
only
difference
between
Roy
and
Al
and
me
at
that
age
was
that
I
never
got
caught.
It
made
me
think
a
lot
about
how
trapping
affected
me
and
how
it
helped
me
mature
as
an
adult
and
how
my
love
for
trapping
and
my
experiences
in
the
bush
have
helped
guide
me
through
most
of
my
life.
Trapping
has
changed
in
many
aspects
and
so
have
the
opportunities
for
people
who
want
to
be
trappers.
To
be
able
to
join
that
fascinating
fraternity
of
unequalled
woodsmen
is
getting
more
difficult
with
each
passing
year.
Thinking
about
all
of
this
helped
me
gain
a
lot
of
respect
for
Kelly
Moran’s
vision
and
what
he
had
put
together.
One
thing
led
to
another
and
before
I
knew
it,
the
second
last
day
of
the
wolf
season,
March
30,
had
arrived.
Early
in
the
morning,
Roy
and
Al
were
driven
to
my
place
by
Roy’s
mother.
It
turned
out
that
she
had
gone
to
the
same
school
as
I
had
and
comes
from
a
very
well
respected
family
that
has
been
in
our
community
for
decades.
Kelly
showed
up
a
few
minutes
later
and
I
put
the
boys
to
work
moving
firewood
for
my
skinning
shed
and
about
40
coyotes
and
wolves
that
needed
to
be
skinned.
While
they
were
busily
engaged,
I
had
coffee
with
Roy’s
mother
and
Kelly
and
explained
to
them
what
I
wanted
to
do
and
to
make
sure
that
they
were
okay
with
it.
For
the
rest
of
the
day
the
boys
and
I
worked
in
the
skinning
shed,
skinning,
fleshing
and
stretching
beavers
and
coyotes.
Kelly
stayed
and
worked
with
us
until
noon
and
then
went
back
to
Grande
Prairie
after
lunch
at
my
house.
The
boys
worked
hard
and
each
had
their
turn
at
skinning,
fleshing
and
stretching.
I
was
behind
on
my
skinning
and
it
had
to
be
done
so
the
two
young
fellows
and
I
went
through
a
lot
of
fur.
They
went
at
it
like
troopers
and
never
complained.
After
they
left
that
night
I
finished
up
a
few
more
pieces
and
when
they
got
back
the
next
morning
we
had
to
stretch
those
and
turn
all
of
the
coyote
hides.
Because
of
that
we
were
a
little
late
getting
out
to
my
trapline.
I
had
a
few
roadkilled
moose
and
deer
with
me
that
I
had
permission
to
leave
for
my
wolves.
I
don’t
use
road-killed
animals
for
bait,
but
I
do
use
them
to
hold
wolves
in
an
area.
Even
though
the
season
was
over,
I
still
like
to
take
free
meals
to
my
wolves.
Winter
can
be
hard
on
them
and
in
March
the
breeding
season
is
on.
The
alpha
male
and
female
are
usually
off
honeymooning
and
without
leadership
the
rest
of
the
pack
can
get
into
a
lot
of
trouble
as
well
as
having
a
harder
time
scrounging
food.
Besides
that,
it
makes
more
sense
to
me
to
feed
a
road
killed
animal
than
have
the
pack
pull
down
any
more
pregnant
moose
than
necessary.
Handling
a
thousand
pound
frozen
moose
is
a
lot
of
work,
but
Roy
and
Al
pitched
in.
They
helped
load
the
road-kills
from
my
trailer
and
into
my
skimmer
and
then
followed
me
on
another
snowmobile.
In
no
time
at
all
we
had
them
delivered
out
into
large
open
cut
blocks
and
other
areas
where
the
wolves
could
come
in
and
safely
feed.
We
stopped
at
my
south
cabin
and
lit
a
fire
in
the
stove
and
then
started
checking
and
closing
the
loops
on
the
snares
at
the
many
different
bait
stations
in
the
area.
Near
the
end
we
found
two
nice
wolves
caught
in
some
thick
bush.
We
took
some
pictures
and
then
Roy
and
Al
helped
me
pack
them
the
100
metres
through
deep
snow
out
to
my
sled.
After
the
snares
were
all
closed
and
hung
up
we
had
lunch
at
the
cabin
and
then
headed
out
to
the
truck.
We
loaded
up
and
came
home.
It
was
evening
when
we
got
home.
We
unloaded
and
got
back
into
the
skinning
shed.
We
hung
more
fur
to
thaw
out
and
started
skinning
what
wasn’t
frozen.
When
Roy’s
mother
came,
the
boys
looked
pretty
tired
but
very
confident
and
very
pleased
with
themselves.
On
the
way
back
from
the
trapline
I
mentioned
that
I
could
use
a
little
help
next
year.
They
were
onto
that
little
idea
faster
than
a
raven
on
a
gut
pile.
I
think
Roy
and
Al
took
home
a
new
appreciation
for
ethics,
wieners
and
beans,
wildlife,
the
bush,
trapping
and
trappers.
For
me
the
experience
was
excellent.
I
was
surprised
at
how
I
felt
when
Roy’s
mother
pulled
out
of
our
yard
with
the
two
boys
grinning
away,
arguing
with
each
other
and
hanging
onto
their
bags
of
wolf,
beaver,
coyote
and
other
skulls.
Trapping
has
been
under
a
lot
pressure
from
a
lot
groups
these
past
few
years,
not
the
least
of
them
being
government
itself.
The
ATA
has
been
busy
trying
to
take
steps
to
ensure
that
this
tradition
carries
on
for
decades
to
come.
I
have
been
in
the
middle
of
this
struggle
for
a
while
now
and
it
can
get
easy
to
forget
about
the
real
reasons
for
loving
trapping.
Thanks
to
Roy,
Al
and
especially
Fish
and
Wildlife
Officer
Kelly
Moran.
I
was
given
a
very
positive
reminder.
Gordy
Klassen |
|
Allan’s
essay
On
December
16,
2005,
I
was
getting
ready
for
school.
I
walked
into
the
entrance
of
our
house
when
I
noticed
two
red
foxes
after
my
cat
Ki-Ki.
My
cat
was
cornered
in
a
pine
tree
in
our
back
yard.
I
ran
outside
to
chase
the
two
foxes
away
and
they
ran
off
quickly.
Then
I
continued
on
to
school.
The
next
morning
one
fox
came
back
and
cornered
Ki-Ki.
The
following
day,
I
called
my
friend
Roy
to
ask
if
he
would
help
me
get
rid
of
the
foxes,
and
he
said
okay.
I
had
some
snares
and
a
foothold
trap
which
I
had
gotten
from
my
Uncle
Dave
years
ago.
We
went
to
the
creek,
which
is
where
I
thought
the
foxes
would
be.
I
had
thought
the
easiest
way
to
trap
the
foxes
would
be
to
use
rib
bones
from
the
past
hunting
season.
Four
days
passed
and
we
had
no
luck.
The
fifth
day
came
along
and
we
had
trapped
one
fox.
On
the
ninth
day
the
traps
had
disappeared.
About
a
month
later,
I
had
a
visit
from
Fish
and
Wildlife
Officer
Kelly
Moran.
He
came
to
inquire
if
I
had
any
knowledge
of
illegal
trapping
at
the
creek.
The
officer
told
us
about
a
woman
reporting
to
them
that
a
fox
was
in
a
trap
with
a
broken
leg.
They
had
to
euthanize
the
fox
so
that
it
would
not
suffer.
They
had
confiscated
all
the
snares
and
the
traps
I
had
used
were
outdated.
I
admitted
to
trapping
at
the
creek.
The
officer
then
read
me
my
rights.
I
was
charged
with
trapping
without
a
licence.
Two
days
later
I
went
to
the
Fish
and
Wildlife
office
and
wrote
the
exam.
I
passed
and
now
I
have
my
trapping
licence.
I
attended
court
and
the
judge
said
I
had
to
write
an
essay
of
500
words.
I
was
provided
with
an
opportunity
to
go
out
with
a
registered
trapper
(Gordy
Klassen)
for
the
weekend
to
learn
from
a
professional.
I
had
a
wonderful
time.
I
learned
to
skin,
wash
and
board
the
hides
of
coyote,
wolf
and
beaver.
The
next
day
we
used
snowmobiles
to
check
the
snares
on
the
trapline.
We
found
we
had
trapped
two
wolves.
The
season
was
ending
so
we
tipped
250
snares.
Gordy
suggested
that
my
friend
Roy
and
I
could
help
him
with
his
trapline
next
year.
It
was
awesome
to
go
out
and
be
educated
in
the
proper,
legal
and
ethical
trapping
techniques
of
a
professional.
When
I
think
back
to
the
way
the
fox
had
to
suffer,
I
really
regret
my
methods.
The
whole
experience
was
a
life
lesson
and
I
learned
a
lot
of
things
that
should
and
should
not
be
done.
I
really
love
being
in
the
forest
and
having
the
wildlife
around
me.
I
will
always
think
about
the
things
I
have
learned
and
I
will
never
forget
this
experience.
I
think
that
my
future
in
trapping
will
be
very
successful.
Allan |
Roy's
essay
It
was
a
couple
weeks
before
Christmas
when
my
friend
called
me
and
asked
if
I
wanted
to
help
him
set
some
traps
because
some
foxes
were
trying
to
kill
his
cat.
We
had
set
the
traps
and
then
the
next
day
we
went
to
check
the
traps
and
we
had
gotten
nothing.
My
friend
had
some
rib
cages
at
his
house
and
I
had
one
that
was
left
over
from
the
hunting
season,
so
we
took
them
down
to
where
we
had
the
traps
set
at
and
left
them
there
for
bait.
For
two
days
we
had
caught
nothing,
but
on
the
fifth
day
we
caught
a
fox.
After
finding
it
we
took
it
back
to
my
friend’s
house
to
skin
it.
Checking
the
traps
eventually
got
boring
so
I
stopped
going
with
my
friend.
My
buddy
called
me
sometime
before
New
Years
and
told
me
that
someone
had
a
taken
a
few
traps
on
Boxing
Day.
In
the
second
or
third
week
of
January
a
Fish
and
Wildlife
Officer
showed
up
on
my
doorstep
and
asked
me
if
I
was
missing
some
traps.
He
asked
me
some
more
questions
and
asked
to
speak
to
one
of
my
parents.
That
day
he
called
my
mom
at
work
and
asked
her
whether
he
could
come
by
and
ask
some
questions
and
discuss
what
was
taking
place
with
this
trapping.
Kelly
Moran
from
the
Fish
and
Wildlife
Division
came
over
to
talk
to
my
parents
and
me,
and
at
that
point
he
told
us
that
he
was
going
to
take
a
legal
statement
in
the
investigation
of
trapping
with
bait
on
private
land.
It
involved
someone
who
had
come
across
a
live,
trapped
fox.
A
legal
statement
is
where
I
tell
what
happened
or
what
had
taken
place.
Kelly
told
me
that
I
had
the
right
to
have
a
lawyer
present
or
consult
with
my
parents
at
any
time
throughout
the
investigation.
Kelly
asked
all
about
my
hunting
in
the
fall
and
what
licences
I
had
for
hunting.
Through
this
part
I
found
out
that
I
didn’t
have
the
proper
licence
for
bow
and
arrow
hunting.
I
also
discovered
that
I
could
not
be
hunting
with
a
large
bore
rifle
because
I
was
under
14,
and
that
to
be
trapping
you
must
have
a
licence.
I
also
learned
that
when
trapping
or
hunting
you
need
the
owner’s
permission
to
be
on
the
land.
Through
this
process
I
was
very
scared
and
worried.
At
one
point
I
had
not
told
Kelly
the
truth
because
I
thought
it
would
cause
one
more
charge.
As
Kelly
was
closing
off
the
statement,
he
asked
if
there
was
anything
else
I
would
like
to
say.
I
felt
frazzled
and
was
very
nervous.
At
this
point
Kelly
ask
me
if
I
would
like
to
speak
to
my
parents.
I
decided
that
I
would,
so
I
told
my
parents
that
I
hadn’t
told
the
truth
about
the
fox
we
had
caught.
They
advised
me
if
I
had
lied
on
anything
that
this
was
the
time
to
confess
before
it
was
too
late.
We
went
back
to
where
Kelly
was
sitting
and
I
told
him
that
I
had
lied
about
the
fox.
We
hadn’t
thrown
it
into
the
bush;
instead,
we
had
taken
it
to
my
friend’s
house.
Kelly
asked
me
why
I
had
lied.
I
told
him
I
didn’t
want
any
more
charges
against
us.
He
informed
me
it
would
have
involved
more
charges
because
it
would
have
been
considered
wasting
an
animal
or
animal
parts.
However,
you
were
at
least
trying
to
do
something
with
the
fox.
After
he
had
asked
me
the
list
of
questions,
he
told
my
parents
and
me
that
he
would
come
back
in
a
few
days
and
tell
us
what
charges
I
had
against
me
and
when
I
would
have
to
go
to
court.
When
he
came
back
he
gave
me
three
written
warnings:
one
for
not
having
a
proper
bow
and
arrow
licence,
one
for
trapping
without
the
land
owner’s
permission
and
the
other
was
for
hunting
with
a
large
calibre
rifle
while
being
under
age.
He
told
me
I
would
have
to
appear
in
court
for
trapping
without
a
licence.
The
sentence
could
be
loss
of
hunting
privileges
for
up
to
five
years
and
a
fine
of
up
to
$50,000
if
I
was
an
adult.
Since
I
wasn’t
of
legal
age,
he
would
recommend
a
sentence
of
less
than
that.
There
was
just
over
a
month
from
the
court
date.
The
court
date
was
February
27
and
I
was
very
nervous
about
it.
The
court
date
had
come
very
quickly.
It
was
one
of
the
coldest
days
of
the
winter
and
I
think
one
of
the
most
miserable
too.
Before
I
knew
it,
I
was
in
the
courtroom
and
at
the
stand.
The
judge
asked
me
if
I
wanted
the
help
of
a
lawyer.
I
faintly
blurted
out,
“No”.
When
he
asked
me
how
I
would
plead,
he
said
it
in
a
way
I
didn’t
understand.
After
he
asked
me
a
couple
of
times,
my
mother
came
up
to
tell
me
what
he
meant.
She
told
him
that
I
pleaded
guilty.
At
that
point
the
Crown
lawyer
handed
my
mother
and
the
judge
a
piece
of
paper
with
a
court
order
that
explained
my
sentence.
I
was
required
to
spend
two
days
on
a
trapline
with
Gordy
Klassen,
plus
write
a
500
word
essay.
My
friend
was
asked
up
to
the
front
and
went
through
his
hearing
with
ease.
We
went
to
Kelly’s
office
and
were
given
a
paper
that
had
the
outlines
to
write
the
essay.
My
parents
drove
me
to
school
right
after
court,
and
some
of
my
friends
asked
where
I
had
been,
so
I
told
them.
In
the
next
month
or
so
Kelly
set
a
date
for
me
and
my
friend
to
go
to
the
trap
line
with
Gordy
Klassen.
In
March
we
met
with
Mr.
Klassen
early
in
the
morning
and
we
were
put
right
to
work.
Our
first
task
was
moving
wood
behind
the
skinning
shack
and
then
we
moved
some
coyotes
and
black
wolves
to
the
heated
shop.
Two
of
the
wolves
were
no
good
because
the
birds
had
pecked
at
them,
and
the
coyotes
had
to
be
thawed
and
skinned.
Gordy
taught
us
how
to
skin
and
flesh
coyotes
properly.
By
the
end
of
the
day,
we
had
skinned
three
coyotes.
The
second
day
he
told
us
we
would
be
going
out
on
the
trapline
and
we
were
going
to
check
snares
and
would
show
us
how
to
hang
them.
It
was
around
noon
when
we
left
Gordy’s
house
to
go
to
the
trapline.
When
we
got
to
where
he
parked
his
truck,
we
got
out
and
put
on
coats
and
boots.
We
went
to
go
get
the
snowmobiles
and
it
took
about
ten
minutes
to
get
them
going.
Then
we
drove
them
up
to
the
truck
and
unloaded
one
of
the
two
moose
and
an
elk
that
Gordy
had
permission
to
take
off
the
highway.
We
unloaded
the
elk
before
leaving
and
took
along
with
us
the
other
equipment
that
we
needed.
We
drove
the
sleds
up
to
the
first
cabin
that
was
only
about
two
or
three
kilometres
away.
When
we
made
it
to
the
cabin,
we
took
out
some
food
from
the
toboggan.
We
made
a
fire
so
that
when
we
got
back
from
going
around
the
lake
it
would
be
warm
in
the
cabin,
in
case
one
of
our
sleds
fell
through
the
ice.
In
the
first
group
of
snares
there
was
little
sign
that
wolves
had
been
there
and
we
never
saw
anything
in
the
snares.
We
took
the
sled
across
the
lake,
which
was
only
about
one
hundred
metres
to
the
next
group
of
snares.
We
found
nothing
in
those
snares,
and
it
was
very
hard
to
hang
them
up
because
there
were
low,
thick
clumps
of
willows.
In
the
next
group
of
snares
we
found
two
okay
looking
wolves;
one
was
a
female
and
the
other
one
a
male,
I
think.
Before
we
could
put
the
wolves
in
the
toboggan,
we
had
to
drop
off
the
moose.
There
were
hundreds
of
tracks
around
where
the
last
moose
had
been.
After
we
had
put
the
wolves
in
the
toboggan
we
headed
back
to
the
cabin
and
had
lunch.
When
we
got
back
to
the
cabin
we
discovered
that
there
was
some
old
grizzly
tracks
near
the
cabin.
Gordy
made
wieners
and
beans
for
us
and
we
had
cheese
burgers
that
were
left
over
from
lunch
on
Saturday.
Through
this
lesson
in
life
I
have
learned
that
I
have
to
be
responsible
for
my
own
actions,
I
have
to
stop
and
think
what
I’m
planning
to
do,
or
about
to
do
and
whether
it
is
right
or
wrong.
Roy |
|