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Look What Showed Up on My Game Cam
Welcome to Medley's Neck, Mr. Canis latrans.
We have suspected their presence the last few years, just never had definitive proof. On another game camera, I have a night shot of three smaller Coyotes, too blurry to pic unless Byron posts it:D http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1446390797.jpg Game cameras are a hoot, btw. Lots of Fox, deer, possums, etc. All the stars come out at night! |
That's really cool, I bet you get some interesting visitors out at your place.
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I've seen a coyote first hand at my back fence, and captured a bobcat on my rural property trail cam along with at least 20 different deer....wildlife thrives like never before here in my lifetime....cool stuff :)
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Well, I'm not riding my moto out to your place...
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Shoot that nasty dog eater!
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Good picture!
I live in an old, established neighborhood, and there are at least a couple of skinny coyotes that slink around looking for wildlife or dog food.... |
pretty dog!! good fur.
they are still kinda nasty looking near me. i saw a red fox in the middle of Pleasanton Ca friday. blew my mind. Friday i set up my game cameras. i get so nervous. i put them up on public land. my friends have had them stolen..knock on wood, i hope i dont lose one. :) |
We seldom see coyotes near here these days, mostly because I have been actively chasing them from the property every time I see them. I started doing that after we realized a young coyote was hunting field mice within 75 yards of the house. I know they're still around, but I do my best to make them feel that being around humans is a bad thing.
The last one I went after turned around and beat a retreat the way it had come, only to run into a female Northern Harrier who gave it a rough time all the way across the marsh.:D Best Les |
Where I live Coyotes are live rats. I rarely go a day without seeing one. They kill and eat any cat or dog under 30 lbs left out at night, and they have zero fear of humans. I had to throw rocks at one to get it to leave the bridal path.
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Another neighbor found their vizsla in the back yard missing his internal organs. Shoot that nasty bastard. |
I have a friend who lives in the Northern part of London, UK and he has documented foxes adapting to urban life for the last 10 years or so. They do quite well.
Ote's on the other hand should be dealt with extreme prejudice. We have a well known member here who lost his dachshund exactly the way Craig T described. |
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Often enough now you'd think people would know better than to leave their small animals outside but they still do it. |
I am a leave wildlife alone sort of guy, but any coyote that would do what Craig describes, hop a fence into an area with a crowd of people to take a small dog, needs to die.
That said, anyone who leaves a small animal outside at night in an area with coyote or raccoon, should not be surprised when their pet turns up missing. My brother in law found a coyote that apparently had been sniffing around the wrong hen house and could not take two 90 lb dogs. The dogs were a little cut up, 'yote was in pieces. |
The more we build and decide to live in the areas where the wild life (that has been here longer then us) lives the more these issues are going to happen.
By all means let us shoot the animals that attack us when we walk in the woods. We have bear, wild cats, coyotes, and all manner of violent animals that use my yard as a thoroughfare, can they do massive damage and kill, sure, are they simply doing what they are programmed to do? Yes. Do I shoot them just because they happen to come walking through? Not a chance. |
Coyotes are getting to be a real issue all over the country. We have a farm in South Georgia. My dad has spent the last ten years and thousands of dollars developing it from a working farm to basically a wildlife management property. Acres of corn, millet, winter wheat, peas and other grains are planted for the quail, turkey and deer. We hunt the property selectively to maintain a healthy ecosystem. We have resident bobcats, hawks and other predators that help keep the small mammals, snakes and wounded animals in check.
A few year back, the Coyotes started showing up more and more and the small game like rabbits and quail have basically disappeared. We now have a standing rule that all Coyotes are shot on site. We see quiet a few on trail cameras but it is not often that we see them in daylight. This one was taken by a friend two weekends ago...never saw him before on a cam. For reference, the buck in the photo was 195lbs...the Coyote was a HUGE male.http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1446400911.jpg |
I am used to seeing coyotes out west where I lived much of my adult life, but never in the NC mountains or Virginia where I grew up. My wife saw a large one a couple years ago at one our Virginia houses and I was sorta dismissive...and assumed a very large fox. Since that house is pretty close to Seahawk's....maybe she was right. There were few deer at one time as well...and now they are everywhere. I have never seen one as dark as the one in Ben Parrish's photo.
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We see coyotes constantly in the Hollywood hills here, crossing Mulholland at night, etc. I've certainly never seen one that looks remotely like the black creature in the above photo, though.
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My GF used to walk her dog in the evenings with a 9-iron, up near the top of Beverly Glen canyon.
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Rick V, I was just kidding about shooting them. I've actually made domestic pets out of several. They make great family pets! Here's a picture of one playing with my dog. Here's another of one napping on my patio chair. :D
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1446402929.jpg http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1446402942.jpg |
Growing up on a small ranch in the coastal mountains near Newbury Park, California, we shot Coyotes on sight...we lost goats and a lot of cats.
I set up two additional cameras around the stable today. My response to the Coyotes will be based on what I see there. This issue is that I live on a Pennisula so, unless their range is more than I have been able to ascertain doing web homework, we could be Waffle House. |
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there are a bunch all over my hood. They sometimes come up to our deck in the backyard. I like to get rid of em' as they kill off all the stray cats who chase out all the rats. They are pretty big as many of our neighbors feed them. We have some good size ones.
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Where we lived years ago there was a great amount of residential development going on which displaced lots of wild life. I won't list all of them, but one result was coyotes sauntering down the streets in broad day light. Another was lots of foxes accustomed to people and emboldened as a result. We actually had a fox in the house two times. They came in after my cat. We live in a country setting now and have everything from small rodents to mountain lions. That includes a population of coyotes, which we can hear yelping on an almost nightly basis. However there seems to be a balance within the animal population. I reason that's because the location is away from dense human population and development. However, people around here loose cats & dogs fairly regularly.
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Great pic, Paul - thanks for sharing.
I'm more of a photo shooter of animals than a gun shooter myself but sometimes you have to deal with predators to protect the innocents. Obviously with the Coyote you have a lot to be concerned with....good luck and keep your babies safe. http://farm1.staticflickr.com/177/37...f7e5e9f4db.jpg |
I walk my foster dog at 4:30 a.m. and we've seen a coyote about 4 times on the parkway path. This is in St. Paul MN, so not in the country at all. We chase them down- figure it's good for them to fear people and dogs. Last time we saw it, we chased it off several times, but it still followed us until we turned around to walk back home, he didn't follow us back, so I think he just wanted to go the way we were going- wooded area that way and we were probably just being a pain in his backside.
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Remarkable animals. Intelligent, resourceful, and rapidly evolving. Unfortunately the evolution is towards ever more effective and opportunistic killing/eating machines. They are shot on sight around our place. But still they thrive and prosper. Like the cockroaches, they will outlast us. Probably only a matter of time until they learn unarmed humans are easy prey.
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One of our dogs got attacked in our backyard at NOON! I had chased off the yote around 10:30AM and the bastard came back. My Cattle dog chased off the yote and saved the 20#terrior but to be honest the Cattle dog is old and tired and would have lost to this yote. Kill any and all. SSS.
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Daves911L. A few years ago here in the southern part of the state (don't remember the specifics), a young lady was killed by two coyotes. Apparently she was out walking or running & when confronted by them, tried to run away. Afterwards, they shot one or more coyotes but who knows if they got the ones that attacked her or not. Also in 1996 a woman was killed by a mountain lion in the local mountains where we hike some times. In that case they shot a mountain lion they were fairly certain is the one that killed her. For that reason I always carry a hand gun with me when we go & insist my wife takes it with her when she & her friends hike around here. I also have a game cam I put out by the driveway when it seems we have some increase in activity. I've never caught a pic of a coyote - only turkeys.
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No more pics. We have seen quiet a few large ones on cam. I live about 5 hrs from there in the mountains; I have seen some big Coyotes up here also. I actually had a bead on one crossing my field but hesitated because I thought it was a large sheppard. Talked with a neighbor and he told me that he had three large ones chase his 3 legged Boxer and only retreated when she made it to the barn and him.
I always thought they were small but lately, we have seen some big ones. |
Why, do you guys think, are coyotes thriving and spreading while wolves are not?
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The bigger ones may be Coywolfs.
Coywolf: New coyote-wolf hybrid sees explosion in numbers | Science | News | The Independent |
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I live in the burbs in a community, but across the street is a farm. At night I hear animal ruckus. I thought it was foxes all along but a neighbor said it was coyotes. She said they really get worked up when they get a kill. Any truth to this?
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It could be a sable coat carolina dog. They are a primative, rare bread that live in the Southeastern US.
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