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Anonymous
Anyone got any great wolverine sightings? Also, this is even less likely, but has there EVER been successful documentation of them mating? They are supposed to be incredible loners, so much that it's surprising they find the time to procreate.
>> Anonymous
Wolverines are badass!
>> Anonymous
Here's a great story I read in a hunting magazine when I was in Alaska. Two guys shoot a moose and bury what they can't carry. They wrap the meat in canvas, put that in a hole, then put down a layer of rocks. They mix hot water with snow and pour the slush in with the rocks, which freeze together like concrete. Then they fill the rest of the hole in.

They come back a couple of weeks later and find a hole in the dirt. Digging down, they find what amounts to a moose-shaped cavity where their kill was.

They figure out the following: The wolverine smelled the meat, and dug down until it hit the rocks. It slept on the rocks so its body heat softened the ice, then dug the rocks out, ripped through the canvas and ate its way into the carcass. It then essentially set up camp and ate until it ran out of moose, then it went in its way.
>> Anonymous
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>>214810
seconded. Anything that small that can pick a fight with a Grizzly bear is truly awesome.
>> Anonymous
>They are supposed to be incredible loners
Somewhat of a myth. Wolverines can be quite social but in those docs I've seen, it was mostly within blood families. They can recognize relatives they haven't met in years.
>> Anonymous
>>214833
Anything can pick a fight with a bear. It's actually beating the bear that's the hard part.
>> Anonymous
>>215042
true. Let me rephrase my statement then. Anything that small that can pick a fight with a Grizzly bear and win (or at least hold it's own)is Truly awesome.
>> Anonymous
IN B4 SNIKTBUB
>> Anonymous
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WOLVERINES!!!!!
>> Anonymous
If you go to Sweden, there will be wolverines...
>> Anonymous
Not too long ago I saw a nature document about wolverines and a Finnish guy who followed and filmed them. A lot of the time the wolverines were either living as a mating pair of male and female, or the female alone with her cubs, and in one occasion there were three generations of wolverines converging on a brook. Apparently their reputation as loners is greatly exaggerated. I can't remember any of them mating in the document, though.