I have many years of elk hunting experience in wolf country as have you. My experience shows that we have called in bulls within a quarter mile of live active kill sites. Pack feeding, barking, howling and letting the entire world know they are content. We have hunted drainages for years, then one year the state agency paid contractors and they killed some 60 wolves form choppers (that was the number we heard). The season before and the season following (along with many previous and many preceeding) we have had just as much or more success than years prior or after. This in not in the "area" of our hunting grounds, this is in exact drainage we park and set up base camp and to spike out of. Just last year we actually had the best 5 days of elk hunting we have ever had with a den site very near. You could literally drive to the location and in a short hike witness a wolf with pups feeding on a cow elk not far from the den. Many hunters in the area had pictures and VIDEO of this happening. We could hear them at night from camp. Just on the other side of the mountain (literally within hiking distance) it was WWIII. Bulls out of thier mind....best 5 days of elk hunting we've ever had. So I understand they are a problem and I dont doubt they can be detrimental to undgulate populations but in my experience a well established existence of wolves hasnt harnessed much of our hunting. This may point to a "properly managed" or "newly established" population of wolves but like I said in my experience it's not been a major issue. I am in no way advocating for wolves. I'm just simply stating what I have witnessed. They have always been a part of our elk hunting grounds. Sometimes we see them, sometimes we dont but there is deffinately a possibly you will run into them. Like many it has never influenced our hunting plans and for good reason. Because most of the time it seems like the wolves blow out more hunters than game and that's been fine with us.You are correct wolves cannot eat them all at once. I took eight people elk hunting In between the park and Dome Mountain over a six week period when I lived in Bozman. One day while packing out two elk, in a three mile stretch I saw over ten dead elk. When approaching my horse trailer there was four trucks from fish and game. ( they were studying wolves ) I told them about the numbers of dead elk, and it looked like there was only two that were barely eaten. They explained packs teach the young how to kill, and they often kill two to three a day.( migration ) One elk can feed a whole pack if they practice killing three a day .. leftovers feed bears, coyotes etc. I observed different but similar wolve behavior near Ennis Montana. They would chase antelope into snow drifts kill them then than repeat. The wolves would not sink hardly at all the antelope would quickly give up, when up to there bellies in snow. There were several antelope that wolves killed that wolves did not eat.
About 8 years ago I was hunting Moose near Bondurant Wyo. I keeped seeing wolves and hearing them at night. a few days later I ran into the person in charged of the feeding, he told me how many elk they killed with out eating them.
Three years ago I was hunting Coues deer 40 miles from Casa Grandes Mexico. I filmed several wolves all had collars on. When that pack killed caves they left nothing but bones.
You are correct.. nine months of the year they were spread out like the game was spread out.
I have zero experience with Oregon wolves.