Raising wolf-dogs

Video: What It's Like Raising Wolf Dogs : Husky Hybrid

By Shawna Kenney

Wolves have captured our imaginations in fairytales, movies and folklore throughout human history. The similarity of the species to domestic dogs can tempt us to try cross-breeding them with the wild wolf, but the results are frequently disappointing.

As Cesar Millan explained in a 2010 episode of “Dog Whisperer” on wolf-dog hybrids, there is a world of difference in that tiny fraction of DNA that separates dogs from wolves — about 1% in the case of the former, versus nearly 2% in the case of humans and apes.

Related: How to “wolf up”

“The more wolf in a hybrid, the wilder the animal,” Cesar says, “and more problems for the humans who believe they can tame them.”

Michael Hodanish learned this when a roommate left him with a wolf-dog named Heidi, with whom he very quickly bonded. After Heidi passed away, he obtained two more wolf-dog pups, one of whom died, leaving the other howling uncontrollably until he began fostering dogs from local shelters.

In his work as a foster companion, Hodanish learned that wolf-dogs brought to the shelters were usually euthanized unless a wolf-dog sanctuary could take the animal. This inspired him to found Howling Woods Farm, an animal shelter in Jackson, New Jersey dedicated to rescuing and placing domestically bred wolves, wolf-dog hybrids, and dogs native to northern parts of the world while educating the public.

Training wolf mixes can be very different than dog training, depending on “content level,” which refers to how much wolf is in the hybrid. Hodanish explains, “A high content wolf-dog is mostly wolf with a small amount of dog, and a low content wolf-dog is mostly dog with a small amount of wolf.” A mid-content wolf-dog, then, would be about the same on both sides.

“Low and mid content wolf-dogs can be trained like any standard or mixed breed dog,” Hodanish continues. “High content animals tend to retain the natural fear that wolves have of men. An animal overwhelmed with fear has a great difficulty focusing on any specific training task.”

The fear factor Hodanish describes is supported by science. Researchers at the University of Massachusetts discovered that wolves develop faster than dogs, relying on nothing but their sense of smell in the early stages of puppyhood, while they’re still blind and deaf. As each new sense emerges, they are initially shocked and afraid of the new stimuli.

Biologist Kathryn Lord explains, “These significant, development-related differences in dog and wolf pups’ experiences put them on distinctly different trajectories in relation to the ability to form interspecies social attachments, notably with humans.”

Her studies show that socializing a dog with a human or a horse only takes 90 minutes of introduction between the ages of four and eight weeks. After that, a dog usually has little fear of humans. “But with a wolf pup,” she says, “achieving even close to the same fear reduction requires 24-hour contact starting before age three weeks, and even then you won’t get the same attachment or lack of fear.”

As in choosing any breed, a potential adopter must carefully research and self-assess before committing to this type of animal companion. Many experts agree that wolf-dogs are not ideal pets for everyone.

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