Border Wolves

The Scent of Love – The Scent of Death

 

Copyright© 2016 – Nicholas Hall

 

Prologue

 

"We simply need that wild country available to us even if we never do more than drive to its edge and look in. – For it can be a means of reassuring ourselves of our sanity as creatures, part of the geography of hope."

(Wallace Stegner)

 

Border – an outer part or edge

Boundary – something that indicates or fixes a limit or extent

(Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary – Eleventh Edition)

National boundaries or borders are drawn between sovereign countries or states, not for the most logical reasons, but for reasons of a political nature or physical conquest. Some of those borders, and one would venture most, have a definitive, limiting barrier such as a fence, wall, river or some other obstacle regulating or limiting access or egress by humans from the country without some sort of permission from authorities, a passport, or visa.

The Canadian/United States Border is reputed to be five thousand sixty-one kilometers or three thousand forty-five miles in length on land and three thousand thirty kilometers or two thousand three hundred eighty miles on water. This border, often marked only by a cleared strip of land and/or metal, stone, or concrete markers, traverses through mountains, valleys, follows rivers, across plains, through lakes, forests, and municipalities with little more than custom agents or border crossing agents to patrol and monitor it. The few fenced portions generally are in the populated areas or at major road or railroad crossings where passports are required to enter or leave. There are those exceptions where ports of entry are located on lake shores where boats and passengers are checked. In all cases, passports are required to cross the international border.

The unfenced, but marked sections of the border are lightly patrolled, but patrolled they are! The agents from both countries are very cognizant of most of what transpires in their patrol areas. Yet, there are instances of border crossings which go undetected!

Along the five hundred forty-seven mile Minnesota segment of the Canadian/United States Border there exists some of the finest pristine lakes and forested wilderness one could hope to find in the upper Midwest and accessible to the public through national parks and forests and state parks and forests; the Northwest Angle State Forest, the Lost River State Forest, Voyageur National Park, Superior National Forest, The Boundary Waters Canoe Area, the Grand Portage State Forest, and the Kabetogama State Forest. These areas are visited by campers, canoeists, boaters, sight-seers, and those who spend time at resorts, motels, and others who just plain drive in to experience the wilderness.

Human traffic is monitored, as best possible, at ports of entry by custom agents as well as regular patrols along the border by agents, but there are just so many agents and so, so, much territory to cover. There are those other creatures, other than humans, the wild, natural creatures which inhabit the forests, crossing the International Border with relative ease, with little hindrance, without a second glance from those assigned to patrol and guard the border. There might be moose, deer, coyotes, bobcats, otter, bears, and many other of nature's critters – including wolves!

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Nick Hall

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or locales is entirely coincidental or used in a fictional content.

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