Wolf Medicine Music - Native American Flute - Blues Mama
Video Title :
Wolf Medicine Music - Native American Flute - Blues Mama
Description :
Wolf Medicine Music - Original Composition
for Native American Flute & Drum. Key of Eb
Raven Cusson - Native American Flute
Niko Tarini - Taos Double-Head Frame Drum
WOLF MEDICINE:
Intuition, Learning, Spirit
This totem brings faithfulness, inner strength and intuition when he enters our lives. But he also brings learning to live with one's self. The wolf teaches us to learn about our inner self and to find our inner power and strength. But to achieve this, we must take risks and face our deepest fears. A wolf totem demands sincerity. This totem demands a lot of us but gives us much in return; a spirit helper that is always there to help and gives us extraordinary powers of endurance. He reminds us to listen to our inner thoughts and trust our insights. They remind us not to waste resources and to learn how to avoid trouble and confrontations. People with Wolf totems have the capacity to make quick and firm emotional attachments. Trust your insights about these attachments. Wolf will guide you. Take control of your life with Wolf's help and do so with harmony and discipline.
***NEWS FLASH***
Judge restores protection for Rockies wolves Sat Jul 19, 12:36 AM ET
BILLINGS, Mont. - A federal judge has restored endangered species protections for gray wolves in the Northern Rockies, derailing plans by three states to hold public wolf hunts this fall.
U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula granted a preliminary injunction late Friday restoring the protections for the wolves in Montana, Wyoming and Idaho. In his ruling, Molloy said the federal government had not met its standard for wolf recovery, including interbreeding of wolves between the three states to ensure healthy genetics.
"Genetic exchange has not taken place," Molloy wrote in the 40-page decision.
Molloy said hunting and state laws allowing the killing of wolves for livestock attacks would likely "eliminate any chance for genetic exchange to occur." Molloy will eventually decide whether the injunction should be permanent.
PROTECTING THE WOLVES: February 22, 2008
DENVER — The Bush administration on Thursday announced an end to federal protection for gray wolves in Montana, Wyoming and Idaho, concluding that the wolves were reproductively robust enough to survive. A coalition of wildlife and environmental groups dismissed the government's claims and announced plans for a lawsuit to reverse the decision, which is to take effect next month. Advocates for the animals said there were too few wolves to make a genetically sound population, and that state plans to manage wolf populations were underfinanced and fueled by a long-simmering animosity against wolves that could drive them back to threatened status. "The numbers are inadequate and the state programs are, too," said a senior wildlife advocate at the Natural Resources Defense Council, a conservation group that is participating in the planned lawsuit. From a base population of 66 wolves introduced into Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho in the mid-1990s, there are now nearly 1,300, with an additional 230 or so in Montana that have drifted down from Canada. State management plans allow for wolf hunting, or outright eradication in some places — including most of Wyoming — with a target population of 150 in each of the three states. Biologists cited by the environmental and wildlife groups say that target population is too small, and suggest instead that 2,000 to 3,000 animals are the minimum needed. Gray wolves were first protected in 1974, one of the first animals to be covered by the Endangered Species Act, which was passed a year earlier. But it turned out there were none left to protect across most of the West. That led to the idea of reintroduction, which began in 1995. "We're not at recovery yet," said Doug Honnold, the managing attorney at the Northern Rockies office of Earthjustice, a nonprofit legal group based in Oakland, CA. "We're in the neighborhood, we're close, but we're not there." Removing federal protections now, Mr. Honnold said, would violate the language of the Endangered Species Act that requires decision makers to use the best possible science in determining a viable target population. Federal officials said their science was sound. What do YOU THINK?
This piece was played on a David R. Maracle Flute - a very unique design - anyone interested should check out www.davidRmaracle.com
Views :
4149
Rating :
4.88
Keywords, Tags :
Native American Flute Drum Wolf Conservation Ecology Blues Mama Raven endangered species
Video Length :
2 : 30
Comments :
Thank you for this video. You did a beautiful job.
Wolves are amazeing creatures, I truely don't see why somone would want to kill them
This is a beautiful song, Raven.
It's sad that federal protection for gray wolves has been removed..
Everything will work out, I know it will.
BTW- I couldn't help but laugh at the expression of the wolf on the left at 1:09. I somehow found it funny.
Looked like he was trying to eat the one on the right's nose. xDD
beautifully put together thank you.......Wolf is love unto his family even strangers. I wish I was wolf that never seen fear.
You honor me, Joanie - it is such a small part, but I can't help but be passionate about it. THANK YOU for bringing the plight of the wolves to my attention, and inviting me to do something about it. You are an outstanding human being! =o)
loved this am a great wolf lover
So glad you enjoyed, friend =o)
your welcome
we do have wolves back in england there at longleat safari park and in the caingorns i think