ISLE, MINN. — Farmer Dan Lorentz heard the wolves howling this fall, then found the freshly killed calf.
"This is all that's left," he said, pointing to a bone-white rib cage, two legs and some hair from the 700-pound animal killed and consumed in September by wolves in a pasture a stone's throw from his home.
Lorentz, 38, doesn't farm in northern Minnesota -- the state's prime wolf country. He and his wife, Michelle, and three kids live just east of Lake Mille Lacs, less than 100 miles north of the Twin Cities. They've been there 10 years.
"It's our first problem with wolves," he said.
But maybe not his last.
The deadly cat-and-mouse game between livestock owners trying to raise animals and wolves trying to eat them continues as it has since Europeans settled the state. In recent years, more than 100 domestic animals have been killed by wolves annually. And while groups opposing the state's first wolf hunting season beginning Nov. 3, and subsequent hunting and trapping seasons beginning Nov. 24, quarrel with the Department of Natural Resources over the agency's 400-wolf quota, wolves blamed for livestock depredations have been routinely trapped and killed for decades, including a record 266 so far this year.
Evidence: wolf tracks
Trapper Dave Hughley, 56, of nearby Onamia was brought in after conservation officer Scott Fitzgerald determined Lorentz's calf had been killed by wolves.