Announcement

Regrettably, we must reschedule our February 2025 Wolf Medicine and Wolf Tracks Across Your Life courses for February 2026. An unexpected weak La Niña weather condition gives less than a 50-50 chance for having snow cover for the entire last two weeks of February, when the courses were scheduled to run. That’s not enough assurance for participants to take off of work, schedule vacation time, and book overseas flights.

With next winter forecast to be colder and snowier than this winter, we have rescheduled Wolf Medicine for February 15-21, 2026, and Wolf Tracks Across Your Life for February 22-28, 2026. You can already register in Wolf Medicine and Wolf Tracks Across Your Life  to reserve your spot.

Yet all is not lost—we are still celebrating our 50th Anniversary with these three special presentations in place of our rescheduled events:

Wolf Stories

February 16, 2025 10-12pm CT on Zoom.

You’ll hear Wolf encounter stories from our book Entering the Mind of the Tracker, indigenous Wolf relationship stories from Whispers of the Ancients, and memories from Tamarack’s life with Wolves.

The Secret Language of Wolves and Dogs

February 22, 2025 10-12pm CT on Zoom.

Begin learning one of the most beautiful and poetic languages—Wolfspeak. You’ll find out how much we typically miss when we see Wolves or Dogs communicating with each other, and you’ll then be able to develop a much closer relationship with your Dog.

A Day with Wolves

March 1, 2025 9am-5pm CT, snow permitting.

We meet at the Brother Wolf Center’s Giant Pine Lodge to go out and immerse ourselves for a full day in the homeland of a family of Wolves. We’ll get to know them by walking their pathways, visiting their bedrooms and dining rooms, meeting their favorite menu items, and taking in the beauty and majesty of the Headwaters Wilderness that they call home. To reserve your spot and receive additional information, please email office@brotherwolffoundation.org

All three events are on a donation basis. You can donate here

It’s our 50th Anniversary!

In 1972, our founder Tamarack Song rescued a litter of pups from the last pair of wild Wolves in Wisconsin, which was trapped and sent off to a zoo. Those pups became the foundation of the first known effort in the US to initiate a Wolf reintroduction program. And so starts the story of the Brother Wolf Foundation. We invite you to join us in celebrating our Golden Anniversary!

Tamarack with pup from rescued Wolves 1974
Tamarack in 1972 with one of the six last known Wisconsin wild Wolves, which he rescued from a zoo after they were trapped.

“If you talk to the animals,” said Salish Chief Dan George, “they will talk to you and you will know each other. If you do not talk to them, you will not know them; and what you do not know, you will fear.” We have come together for love of Wolf; and to truly know and love Wolf, we need to know their language. The theme of this Anniversary Year is Wolf language—the elaborate, poetic way they communicate with each other, and with us. Throughout the year, we are offering special courses, publications, and presentations on Wolf language. Please look under the respective menu item for a listing.

As a kickoff for the year’s celebration, here is a video of Amelia Thomas, author of an upcoming book on animal language, interviewing Tamarack for the book:

Thank you for being a part of our 50th Anniversary Celebration in whatever way you can participate. We look forward to having a good time with you as we come together to honor the spirit of Wolf,

The BWF staff, Board of Trustees, and friends

Brother Wolf Foundation went international!

In 2022, the Brother Wolf Foundation went international! It happened rather serendipitously while our founder Tamarack Song, along with his mate and co-instructor Lety Seibel and program coordinator Baerbel Ehrig (a.k.a. OdeMakwa), presented a series of workshops and courses in Europe during the summer. A certain magic seemed to follow them throughout their travels — it’s as though they were being tracked by Wolves. First there were chance events, like pulling off the autobahn for a break and running into the German Wolf Center (more on that later). Then there was discovering that Hugh Jansman, the Wolf biologist for Holland’s Animal Ecology Environmental Research Center (WENR), was enrolled in one of their workshops. Mishan Biesbroek, a professional tracker and the only person to date to see a Wolf in the wilds in Holland, was another course participant.

The mentoring skills workshop Lety, OdeMakwa, and Tamarack presented was held at a remote camp in Holland’s Leuvenhorst (Wolf Forest Preserve). It is Holland’s largest wilderness tracked. The three were amazed that in such a small, densely populated country there would be a wild place where you could walk for two days without crossing a road. AND being home to three of Holland’s four established Wolf packs, it is the epicenter of Wolf activity.

On the last day of the workshop there, one of the packs passed so near the camp and left such conspicuous sign that it was as though they deliberately did it for us to discover.

By the way, Holland — miraculously — now has forty Wolves: eleven in the mother pack, nine in the other three packs, and another twenty lone Wolves. And speaking of miracles, Germany currently has 170 packs spread across the northern half of the country, along with loners and several other isolated packs spread throughout the rest of the land, which is a fantastic success story considering it all occurred only since 2000.

The Captivating German Wolf Center

The three worked a visit to their “chance “discovery, the German Wolf Center, into their tight schedules. They met with Christina Fass, who with Frank Fass founded the Center. Right away Christina and Tamarack connected, as they each lived with a pack of Wolves, which was a turning point in their lives. They shed tears together as they acknowledged how rare it was to find someone else — even amongst those closest to them — who truly knew what it meant to have other-than-human people as your primary family. And to experience the tragedy and traumatization of that family crumbling before you while you stood helplessly by.

The German Wolf Center is dedicated to working with public opinion and livestock management practices, so that Wolves can coexist with humans in modern Europe. With extensive educational exhibits, guided tours of the five yards housing Eurasian and White Arctic Wolves, and the opportunity to stay in tree house hotel units hovering over the Wolf yards, the Center is a one-of-a-kind world-class labor of love and dedication by Christina, Frank, and their stellar support team.