Why you should care...
Because standing with 1,000 or so strangers in total silence and hearing nature howling back from the darkness — that changes you.Conditions need to be right for wolves to make their grand auditory appearance.Welcome to the Public Wolf Howl in Canada’s Algonquin Provincial Park, about a 3.5-hour drive north of Toronto. Started in 1963, it has just celebrated its 50th anniversary. Lupine lovers from all over the world are drawn to the event, which happens just a few times each year, during August and early September, with public howls taking place only on Thursdays when weather — and available wolves — permit.
The howl was originally organized for research purposes, and the data is still documented on the park website. Back in the ’60s, wolves were considered “vermin.”
Because
wolves are a fickle bunch. Conditions need to be right for them to make
their grand auditory appearance. And August is the time of year when
the pups — who are the first to reply — are extremely vocal and will
respond back to human mimicry of an adult wolf’s howls. In the days
leading up to a scheduled howl, park naturalists first do a “sound check” — listening for signs of the five packs of Eastern wolves,
a species unique to the region, living along the highway. (The park is
home to around two dozen packs — about 200 wolves total). If the
searchers are successful and the weather looks favorable, the howl goes
ahead. But there is no guarantee that even a yip will be heard in
response to the human calls on the big night. Which only adds to the
anticipation.Once green-lighted, there is plenty of howl hoopla leading up to the main event. At the beginning of the four-hour evening, the crowd learns the howl house rules. No. 1: No noise whatsoever. Next comes the challenge of closing down the 40-kilometer stretch of main highway (nearly 25 miles), where volunteers line each side with 400-plus cars. Once parked, everyone stands outside of their vehicles and waits. “It is dark. Believe me, it is dark,” Peter recounts. “You just can’t visualize the stars. … There’s no sound. There’s no noise.”
Then the calling begins. For the Wilsons’ howl, it took three attempts to elicit a response. The result was powerful, and Peter wells up just remembering the overwhelming experience of this bucket-list event. “It sounded so close. It was right there,” Steve remembers.
And how much does this once-in-a-lifetime, get-up-close-with-nature experience cost? Nothing. It’s free with the admission to the park — around $15 for a carload. The park alone is worth the price of admission, even if the wolves keep quiet. The huge, 2,955-square-mile provincial park is known for its sprawling beauty, beaches, canoeing, hiking and more.
For those lucky enough to hear the wolves, it’s an overwhelming and present moment. “It’s a picture you can’t paint when you hear it on an iPhone,” Peter says.
For the rest of us, there’s this:
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