Woman Trapped in Tree Surrounded by Wolves for an Hour

Dangling from a tree branch above a hungry pack of wolves, a hiker might ordinarily think time was running out. If youâre a hiker in Okanogan County, Washington, however, youâve got all the time in the world.
At least, thatâs what the local rescue officers seem to think.
Authorities in Okanogan County had a hard time determining whose responsibility it was to save the research student from meeting her untimely demise at the jaws of the Loup Loup wolf pack, KING 5 News reports. The pack is estimated to contain as many as 8 wolves, and its territory has been moving around in recent years.

Hikers in the area are advised to stay clear of the wolves, but if and when they meet, it apparently leaves local authorities in a dilemma.
The Washington Fish and Wildlife Department doesnât get involved in search and rescue operations, and Okanogan County rescue dispatchers donât ordinarily send staff out to save people who arenât missing. A hiker treed by wolves seems to skirt the responsibility of both groups. And that can be a big problem if youâre the one stuck up the tree.
As the departments disputed whose jurisdiction the rescue belonged to, the woman in peril had little choice but to âhang in there,â and wait for the business to be settled.

Hereâs how that conversation went.
âSo did Fish and Wildlife have anybody to go?â
âYeah, they said they have an agent in service up there. Theyâre not exactly sure where heâs at. But he is in service in Okanogan County.â
âOkay, good.â
âHeâs supposed to call me back. Talking to the Forest Service, itâs not a Forest Service individual at all. This is actually a search and rescue operation.â
âOkayâŠâ
âSo, I guess weâre requesting Okanogan County Search and Rescue to go rescue her.â
âOkay, I donât know that theyâre able to do that, because of a pack of wolves.â
âBut what Iâm being told is, although sheâs is not actually lost, it is a rescue, and it would fall under Okanogan County.â

âOkay, and who was it that told you that?â
âThe Forest Service. And when I talked to Fish and Wildlife, they said, âNope, thatâs not search and rescue. Thatâs just us.â And âno helicopter.ââ
âSee?! For goodnessâ sakes! Somebody needs to figure it out.â
âAnd Iâm like, âI donât know how long this girl can hang in this tree.â Seriously.â
âI know!â
âSheâs just hanging.â
âFor goodnessâ sake.â

Washington Fish and Wildlife agents told the local search and rescue department not to get involved, emphasizing that a helicopter rescue was out of the question, as such an incident could disturb the wolves, listed as endangered by the federal government.
The state department was less concerned with the womanâs life than it was with finding out why she was hiking through a known wolf den, though that information had not been passed on to Okanogan County authorities.
There was no way of telling how safe the woman was, or how long she would remain that way.

Eventually, a DNR helicopter came to the rescue, and extracted the woman from danger. According to KREM, the wolves were still there when the helicopter landed.
âItâs kind of frustrating, as the Sheriff in the county. We have wolves, and they are federally protected. So, we donât know anything about them. They tell you these are the numbers, but we are blacked out. We donât know where theyâre at, we donât know how many, we donât know where the packs are,â said Okanogan County Sheriff Frank Rogers.

There is little indication to the public where the wolves are living and where people should avoid going. Rogers wants to see that changed, so something like this doesnât happen again.
The Washington Fish and Wildlife department has promised to put up signs indicating wolf presence in the area, but so far none of those signs have been installed.
Learn more in the video below.
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Source: KREM 2 News