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Post by braveheart on Aug 23, 2013 20:10:50 GMT -6
I had 1 group of coyotes way out from my home.I gave a Interrogator bark had 2 bunches I think litter might have been separated litter.Man they were really getting after it a bunch of yapper's.That call really tears up the throat but boy it really works.Going to run my new line of Getter lure on them.
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Post by trappnman on Aug 24, 2013 7:27:00 GMT -6
So why do you not think it was 2 litters?
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Post by braveheart on Aug 25, 2013 19:51:28 GMT -6
The far out group was all together but the other separate 2 ones are only a mile apart.I was figure the other back group was playing catch up.They are all on the same high back ridge as cpr yet.
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Post by RdFx on Aug 26, 2013 10:19:50 GMT -6
I have two groups that are only seperated by a county hywy..... why they dont cross regulary beats me... maybe after some are trapped or shot especially deer season and mating urg starts and then they disperse. I have sat out at my firering at nite listening to the two seperate groups during thier sing-songs. Entertaining for sure. Have a wolf pack that comes thru about once every two weeks and judging from when they are on the trail cams i noticed the yotes are QUIET! LOL....
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Post by Steve Gappa on Aug 26, 2013 10:27:13 GMT -6
Lee, when we collared, we had a mated pair that was always on one side of a backroad 2 lane blacktop road. To the edge, but never over. for many months, close to a year if I remember right.
the male died, and in a short time (weeks) the female had crossed over to the other side, and was then always found on that side of the hwy when monitored.
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Post by braveheart on Aug 27, 2013 4:22:41 GMT -6
Soon as this heat breaks I am going to trap one and notch his ear and see if I can catch it back.I did it only once a while back.Had one pull out of a old 4 long spring and got him 2 fields over on the snow.
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Post by jsevering on Aug 27, 2013 5:20:22 GMT -6
talking about lines sure appears that it could be problematic for transients, through the high prey areas at least in the charts posted on the yellows stone studies .... someone told me or I read a while back, that a dispersing coyote wont howl if it knows its encroaching, but would get vocal if it came to an area it thought it might be able to use... guess the vocalization was to check for residents..
on that radio collard female that lost her mate ... you think she got displaced once she lost her mate or left that area on her own... makes you wonder if she obtained the alpha position on the other side of the highway... you would think she would of got ran off or displaced again if she didn't... wish I understood the inner workings better... jim
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Post by trappnman on Aug 27, 2013 5:59:42 GMT -6
braveheart- I recaught 4 of my collared coyotes- once a week later, same farm in a coon set 50 yards away from original capture spot, 1 week later
3 others I caught on same farms, 1 year later
jsevering, My thought was that she now paired up on the other side, but thats just speculation
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Post by bogio on Aug 27, 2013 16:59:23 GMT -6
Hey Marty!
How about a collar with a tag that reads:
SILKIE
prop. of Marty S.
That way the the dog boys will know which way to send it if they luck out and beat you to it!
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