Saturday, December 12, 2009
Coyotes Are Biding Their Time
The time of the Hunger Moon is fast approaching. It's that period next month when January coyotes and other critters have cleaned up on the aged, dead and wounded deer in the woods.Right now, the woods are fairly silent at night. We've just started the muzzleloader season. There didn't seem to be a great deal of interest because of the deep snow, and I spent a good deal of time today outdoors shoveling my deck. We've had a big week for snow, and as of this writing, we've received 82 inches of snow at my house.There is still a bunch of standing corn in the area where local farmers couldn't get it off before all the snow arrived. Deer are staying near this abundant food source.I never heard a shot all day today, and although a neighbor hunted, he didn't see a deer. All of that will soon change when the winter woods will rumble with the sounds of coyotes on the chase.
These predators are looking for food, and it matters little what is available. Coyotes have learned how to live in close proximity to man, and they are not bashful about announcing their presence. It's at times like this, with cold temperatures at night and snow growing deeper by the day, that the brush wolves start to make their presence known.Twice this week I've seen coyote tracks near my mail bow, and out in back where deep snow covers what's left of our food plot. The local coyote population has learned to hang close to whatever deer forage is available, and as the snow piles up, they will start pulling down deer.A coyote has a couple of favorite foods. One is cats. If Tabby is left outdoors at night, and doesn't show up in the morning, it's quite likely the mouser ran afoul of one or more coyotes and won't ever be coming home again.The same holds true for small dogs. Leave a bowser out all night, and one of two things will happen. The dogs and other local dogs will form a pack and start running deer. Or ... they may bump heads with a pack of hunting coyotes, and they too will become fodder for their closely related canine family members.There is little room in today's society for free-roaming cats and dogs. Cats are luckier than dogs because they can climb trees unless they get ambushed by the coyotes. The best bet is to keep pets inside at all times to avoid losing Fifi. Not much is left of a cat or dog that is caught outside by a bunch of coyotes.I know some coyote hunters who won't run these animals unless there are at least two or more big dogs in the pack. Coyotes, especially in February when males and females are about to breed and are running together, will team up and kill a single hound dog and it's not a pretty sight.Small dogs are a favorite coyote food. Fewer dogs are taken than cats, but fewer people let their small dogs run loose in the winter. By all that is right, no cat or dog should be left outside after dark. Cats are every bit the predator that a coyote is, but they tend to catch mice and ruffed grouse while coyotes prefer larger prey.The coyote is a much maligned animal, and over many years when Michigan paid a bounty on coyotes and foxes, the only thing the bounty system proved was that it didn't work. I grew up in Clio, just north of Flint, and we hunted red foxes all winter for the bounty back in the late 1950s.
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