We've got between 20-30 yotes around here. Don't see any rabbits and very few rats/mice. I need to get setup to put a few down.
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LOL, I used a Bluetooth speaker a week or so before I got the coyote, and played a turkey in distress with coyote attacking from my phone. The male in the screenshots in the OP showed up in about 5 minutes...I didn't think it would work, and not so quickly. It spooked and fled before I could get a shot off. And that is how it learned that calls from my Bluetooth speaker were fake, and I could never get him to come back.
I also drove around with my windows down playing a coyote pup in distress (I did not bring any weapons...was just doing in rural areas). Within about 30 seconds a huge owl flew down from a tree toward my car. I guess owls would eat a hurt coyote pup if they could.
I might have to get one of these calls and get a motor to spin some pheasant feathers and hunt some coyotes this weekend. I should offer my services to farmers in the area.
<img src="" /><img class="lazyload" src="//www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3E" />//www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3E<img class="lazyload" src="//www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3E" /><img class="lazyload lazyload" src="//www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3E" />//www.w3.org/2000/svg%22%20viewBox=%220%200%20210%20140%22%3E%3C/svg%3EThis is one of the prettiest ones I’ve gotten. I’m slowly setting up to hunt them, last year the largest pack was 8 or more. I decided to start hunting them when I got my puppy last year. I would take her out around midnight and 5 to 10 minutes later I would have coyotes on my game cameras. She is a little over a year old and 100lb Doberman so I don’t worry quite as much but she don’t go outside without me at night. I’ve had several buddies lose labs too them, almost always males. I think the females get them to chase when in heat.
That is a nicer looking coyote, especially compared to the one I got. Did you mount it? Even then I don't know if I would (though a coyote with teeth and a pheasant in its mouth would be cool for a mount.)
No sir, when I used to trap with some buddies we got several good looking yotes. Some of them got them mounted, the prettiest mounts that they have is a marbled skunk, bobcat and river otter. I had a lot of fun running traps with those guys, it was a never ending adventure.
One spot we had to canoe out too, we got a big male coyote. My buddy popped him with the pistol, I grabbed him and tossed him in the canoe. As we were paddling to more traps it started growling. The worst was before we were allowed to take bobcats…. You had to choke them out with a catch pole then release them.
LOL, I used a Bluetooth speaker a week or so before I got the coyote, and played a turkey in distress with coyote attacking from my phone. The male in the screenshots in the OP showed up in about 5 minutes...I didn't think it would work, and not so quickly. It spooked and fled before I could get a shot off. And that is how it learned that calls from my Bluetooth speaker were fake, and I could never get him to come back.
I also drove around with my windows down playing a coyote pup in distress (I did not bring any weapons...was just doing in rural areas). Within about 30 seconds a huge owl flew down from a tree toward my car. I guess owls would eat a hurt coyote pup if they could.
I might have to get one of these calls and get a motor to spin some pheasant feathers and hunt some coyotes this weekend. I should offer my services to farmers in the area.
I mostly lucked out as I got a later than normal start. I was able to kick up a raccoon with the FoxPro call, but there was too many branches in the way and my shot got deflected.
I was out on public hunting grounds, and when I went back to recover my FoxPro, I left my Bulldog back at my truck. As soon as I bent down to pick up the speaker section, I accidentally pressed the remote call in my pocket!
Boy, you should have seen me fumbling 100 yards in the dead of night with nothing more than a mini red LED flashlight while I could hear raccoons heeding the call coming in from right behind me! It was like my own personal horror flick!
LOL, I used a Bluetooth speaker a week or so before I got the coyote, and played a turkey in distress with coyote attacking from my phone. The male in the screenshots in the OP showed up in about 5 minutes...I didn't think it would work, and not so quickly. It spooked and fled before I could get a shot off. And that is how it learned that calls from my Bluetooth speaker were fake, and I could never get him to come back.
I also drove around with my windows down playing a coyote pup in distress (I did not bring any weapons...was just doing in rural areas). Within about 30 seconds a huge owl flew down from a tree toward my car. I guess owls would eat a hurt coyote pup if they could.
I might have to get one of these calls and get a motor to spin some pheasant feathers and hunt some coyotes this weekend. I should offer my services to farmers in the area.
I mostly lucked out as I got a later than normal start. I was able to kick up a raccoon with the FoxPro call, but there was too many branches in the way and my shot got deflected.
I was out on public hunting grounds, and when I went back to recover my FoxPro, I left my Bulldog back at my truck. As soon as I bent down to pick up the speaker section, I accidentally pressed the remote call in my pocket!
Boy, you should have seen me fumbling 100 yards in the dead of night with nothing more than a mini red LED flashlight while I could hear raccoons heeding the call coming in from right behind me! It was like my own personal horror flick!
That is hilarious. I can only imagine how that must have felt. I’d like to know how you handle yotes coming into an electronic call hot with a Bulldog. Do they tend to come in fast like coons do? I haven’t hunted yotes yet, but I’m interested in learning eventually.