Post by Steve Gappa on Jan 5, 2005 9:15:40 GMT -6
Following the Farmer…the Key to Coyote success....
By Steve Gappa
If you live in farm country…REAL farm country that is with corn and beans and hay and cows and tractors- then you soon find out that your coyote trapping opportunities and successes are in a large part out of your hands- and in the hands of the farmer. What he does and when he does it, dictates when, how and where to set out your traps. You can either fight the harvest or learn how to take full advantage of the harvesting of the crops and the land use patterns. We all are aware of how much an impact picking crops and plowing has on our farmland trapping- but how about the rest of the year? Are coyotes as tied to the crops and the seasonal rotations during the spring and summer as during the fall? In my opinion, they are- and by knowing how coyotes utilize the fields during the off season only increases your knowledge of your coyotes- and the more knowledge you have, the easier they are to catch.
Lets start out by looking at our trapping areas during the late winter and early spring. In most farm areas in the northern fur belt- the crops will have been harvested, fields plowed, pastures empty. In normal years the fields are snow covered and windswept- leaving very little for coyotes to hunt and live in. This is the time for you to be out and to be looking- cause what you see now- is most likely permanent or at least semi permanent landscape and will be the one constant you have as a farmland trapper. These areas- set asides, draws and ravines, rocky areas, rivers and creeks- will be the last refuge of your local coyotes. Their permanent base. Whatever coyotes are left after the fall/winter, will be in these areas for two simple reasons- food and shelter. Note these areas and how they relate to each other. If your area is typical farmland, these areas will be somewhat isolated, but can (and will be) connected up by the coyotes later in the year. Consider it your starting point.
Many of these areas will be used for denning. Coyotes often like to have their pups in the most inaccessible out of the way locations as one could imagine. But not always. Our collared coyotes showed an interesting thing- the females either had their pups and raised them in the fore mentioned isolated areas….or we found quite a few did the exact opposite- had their dens and raised their pups in the middle of nowhere. That is- right smack in the middle of a corn field or bare hay field. Whether these females simply are forced out of the better areas or whether they instinctively know such a place is “safe” I don‘t know. It makes sense, in that they can see danger coming from quite a distance when set up in the middle of a bare field. But in any case, here we already have coyotes that not only live in the fields at a later age- but are actually whelped and reared in the same fields.
So you have coyotes born in the fields and you also have coyotes being raised on the edges of these fields. This is important to remember- so let me emphasize it even more. Cultivated fields, in farmland country, provide a MAJORITY of the available habitat. Once the crops reach the height of a few feet high, coyotes become orientated to them and spend a great deal of time in and around these fields. When you think about it, it shouldn’t be a surprise- these corn fields are perfect habitat places, providing shelter from predators and weather and food. Lots of food. Either in the fields themselves or in the little habitat strips around the fields- fencerows, field changes, waterways. It’s a short journey out of the fields to run the waterways and roads- and if confronted…easy to slip back into the corn. Consider the cornfields a secret little world if you will… an unseen world, with a full range of inhabitants. Based on radio studies to a degree and my own observations, I believe that coyotes spend most of their time in and about the corn fields- and feel they utilize them in many ways. In many areas including mine, the milk stage corn itself is an important food source, and many times coyote droppings contain as much corn as any raccoons. I cannot make this point enough- as the corn matures- your coyotes, no matter where whelped- will be in it. And they will be in it until forced to move. And when they do start moving, it will be reluctantly- that is, they WANT to be there and they will stay in the general area as long as there still is some corn and cover. And what happens to the prey that was in the fields you might ask? Good question- most of the critters able to run or fly away- do. The mice, rabbits, etc simply move into the adjoining cover. This makes them easy prey for coyotes hunting the picked field areas for a night or two. Many small critters are killed during the harvest, and the opportunistic coyote takes advantage of this bounty also. But this doesn’t last too long. Almost as soon as the corn is gone- the stalks are round baled, taken off and the field is plowed. Your once prime habitat environment is now a plowed, empty field.
By Steve Gappa
If you live in farm country…REAL farm country that is with corn and beans and hay and cows and tractors- then you soon find out that your coyote trapping opportunities and successes are in a large part out of your hands- and in the hands of the farmer. What he does and when he does it, dictates when, how and where to set out your traps. You can either fight the harvest or learn how to take full advantage of the harvesting of the crops and the land use patterns. We all are aware of how much an impact picking crops and plowing has on our farmland trapping- but how about the rest of the year? Are coyotes as tied to the crops and the seasonal rotations during the spring and summer as during the fall? In my opinion, they are- and by knowing how coyotes utilize the fields during the off season only increases your knowledge of your coyotes- and the more knowledge you have, the easier they are to catch.
Lets start out by looking at our trapping areas during the late winter and early spring. In most farm areas in the northern fur belt- the crops will have been harvested, fields plowed, pastures empty. In normal years the fields are snow covered and windswept- leaving very little for coyotes to hunt and live in. This is the time for you to be out and to be looking- cause what you see now- is most likely permanent or at least semi permanent landscape and will be the one constant you have as a farmland trapper. These areas- set asides, draws and ravines, rocky areas, rivers and creeks- will be the last refuge of your local coyotes. Their permanent base. Whatever coyotes are left after the fall/winter, will be in these areas for two simple reasons- food and shelter. Note these areas and how they relate to each other. If your area is typical farmland, these areas will be somewhat isolated, but can (and will be) connected up by the coyotes later in the year. Consider it your starting point.
Many of these areas will be used for denning. Coyotes often like to have their pups in the most inaccessible out of the way locations as one could imagine. But not always. Our collared coyotes showed an interesting thing- the females either had their pups and raised them in the fore mentioned isolated areas….or we found quite a few did the exact opposite- had their dens and raised their pups in the middle of nowhere. That is- right smack in the middle of a corn field or bare hay field. Whether these females simply are forced out of the better areas or whether they instinctively know such a place is “safe” I don‘t know. It makes sense, in that they can see danger coming from quite a distance when set up in the middle of a bare field. But in any case, here we already have coyotes that not only live in the fields at a later age- but are actually whelped and reared in the same fields.
So you have coyotes born in the fields and you also have coyotes being raised on the edges of these fields. This is important to remember- so let me emphasize it even more. Cultivated fields, in farmland country, provide a MAJORITY of the available habitat. Once the crops reach the height of a few feet high, coyotes become orientated to them and spend a great deal of time in and around these fields. When you think about it, it shouldn’t be a surprise- these corn fields are perfect habitat places, providing shelter from predators and weather and food. Lots of food. Either in the fields themselves or in the little habitat strips around the fields- fencerows, field changes, waterways. It’s a short journey out of the fields to run the waterways and roads- and if confronted…easy to slip back into the corn. Consider the cornfields a secret little world if you will… an unseen world, with a full range of inhabitants. Based on radio studies to a degree and my own observations, I believe that coyotes spend most of their time in and about the corn fields- and feel they utilize them in many ways. In many areas including mine, the milk stage corn itself is an important food source, and many times coyote droppings contain as much corn as any raccoons. I cannot make this point enough- as the corn matures- your coyotes, no matter where whelped- will be in it. And they will be in it until forced to move. And when they do start moving, it will be reluctantly- that is, they WANT to be there and they will stay in the general area as long as there still is some corn and cover. And what happens to the prey that was in the fields you might ask? Good question- most of the critters able to run or fly away- do. The mice, rabbits, etc simply move into the adjoining cover. This makes them easy prey for coyotes hunting the picked field areas for a night or two. Many small critters are killed during the harvest, and the opportunistic coyote takes advantage of this bounty also. But this doesn’t last too long. Almost as soon as the corn is gone- the stalks are round baled, taken off and the field is plowed. Your once prime habitat environment is now a plowed, empty field.