A Wild Wolf Meets A Lab And Stands Nose To Nose. What Happens Next Is Remarkable

This is Romeo. He became famous in Juneau, Alaska for being a lone wolf who played with all the locals dogs at the Mendenhall Glacier during the winter months. There's even a special tribute to him there.



Photo credit: Nick Jans

It all started in December of 2003, when Alaskan wildlife photographer Nick Jans spotted the wild wolf from his back deck. What he imagined would be a fleeting glimpse grew over the next few months into a unique relationship. Not only did the wolf stay nearby – a rarity for animals that often cover hundreds of miles of territory – it also began playing with one of Jans' dogs, a female Lab.



Photo credit: Nick Jans

The photo above was their first meeting. Dakotah, Jans' "Juliet", slipped away and stood nose to nose with Romeo.

"We were keeping our dog under control and she just slipped out from under my fingers, which were hooked around her collar," Jans told National Geographic.



Photo credit: Nick Jans

Romeo began to play regularly with a number of dogs whose owners frequented the area. Months turned into years and the wolf continued to hover on the edges of the city, an ambassador from the wilds beyond.



Photo credit: Nick Jans

"It's one thing to have a tolerant meeting with a wild wolf that goes on for a matter of minutes," Jans said. "But this went on for six years."

The average life span for a wild wolf is only three years.



Photo credit: Nick Jans

Jans chronicles an improbable series of relationships between the wolf and many of the people and dogs in Juneau in his book, A Wolf Called Romeo.



Photo credit: Nick Jans

"For my friend Harry Robinson, who had an incredibly close relationship with the wolf, the wolf would bring out toys that he'd stashed," Jans said. "One was a Styrofoam float. Romeo would pick it up and bring it to Harry to throw. He clearly understood the same sort of behaviors that we see in dogs. Any highly intelligent animal, from killer whales to wolverines, will engage in play when they have leisure and aren’t engaged in survival."



Photo credit: Nick Jans

"The amazing thing was Romeo's understanding. It wasn't just our understanding and tolerance. It was the combination of his and ours and the dogs'. We were these three species working out how to get along harmoniously. And we did."



Photo credit: Nick Jans

To read stories about Romeo and see more amazing photos, check out Jans' book A Wolf Called Romeo.