You must be a good shot to hit a moving wolf from a motorized parachute/paraglider, it seems to me, or do they spray them with AR-15 automatic fire? If the motor is running the vibrations must be harsh and even if it isn't there must be a fair amount of wind movement up there.
I'm a former hunter (I no longer want to kill anything) but for years, even after I quit hunting, I had a cabin in the North Woods of Wisconsin where male family and friends would get together to hunt deer in the late fall. Frankly, I liked it, and people who have not hunted really can't know the compelling kind of intensity that comes with pointing your nose into the wind (which does humans no good, but you instinctively do it anyway) and stalking deer. Which you eat. And which I think is generally more humane in terms of animal-killing than commercial beef, pork or fowl. (And I still have some practical reservations about the whole process.) But hunting has become politicized, and has become a manhood thing, very often for city folk who know nothing about hunting and little about guns, except that they want to go and kill something. In fact, I think manhood issues lie behind a lot of political problems in the US.
The wolves thing is a manhood issue. "I killed a big bad wolf, so I can't possibly be a pussy," when, in fact, you're probably more in danger from the neighborhood pit bull than you would ever be from a wolf. I've twice seen wolves in the wild, once in NW Ontario and once in Yellowstone, and was thrilled by the privilege.
That said, I was once a newspaper columnist, and there was a controversy over how many moose permits would should be allowed in the Boundary Waters area of Minnesota, up on the Canadian border. I suggested unlimited permits in January, bulls only, with a few restrictions. No guns, spears only. Ski-in, ski-out, you could pull a sled. No electronic equipment at all -- if you got hurt, that was your problem. If you died out there, that was your problem. If you were late coming back, nobody would be allowed to look for you. A state wildlife guy said that under those conditions, he would expect at least a hundred hunters every year, even if hunters died the year before. Such is manhood. 8-)