Author
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Topic: Off to a good start
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TA17Rem
Hello, I'm the legendary Tim Anderson, Southern Minneesota Know it all
Member # 794
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posted August 25, 2007 07:59 PM
![[Razz]](tongue.gif) [ March 28, 2010, 07:16 PM: Message edited by: TA17Rem ]
-------------------- What if I told you, the left wing and right wing both belong to same bird!
Posts: 5614 | From: S.D. | Registered: Jan 2006
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Tim Behle
Administrator MacNeal Sector
Member # 209
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posted August 26, 2007 07:50 AM
It's still a little early to fool with them here. the Adults don't have much of any fur.

I took that last Monday while photographing a cattle Round-up. The cowboys were still a mile from me when this coyote came mousing his way past me not 20' away. He ended up bedding down under a mesquite about 30 yards away, but when I tried to slip around for a picture, I kicked a rock and spooked him. [ August 26, 2007, 07:50 AM: Message edited by: Tim Behle ]
-------------------- Personally, I carry a gun because I'm too young to die and too old to take an ass kickin'.
Posts: 3160 | From: Five Miles East of Vic, AZ | Registered: Jun 2003
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JoeF
resides "back east"
Member # 228
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posted August 26, 2007 08:26 AM
Tim your picture makes me think of how unusual this summer has been. Our summer time coyotes would usually make the one in your pic look like a wooly mammoth - I'd imagine you're familiar with the naked look from your mid west days. Not this year. All summer long every coyote I've seen has had a significant coat. Way hotter and drier than normal this year, too. Doesn't add up. Probably freeze our balls off this winter.....
Posts: 658 | From: Midwest | Registered: Aug 2003
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newbomb
Knows what it's all about
Member # 888
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posted August 26, 2007 12:11 PM
Most of the coyotes ive seen in Indiana this summer had more fur on than normal.A few looked like winter coats.
Posts: 66 | From: southern indiana | Registered: Jul 2006
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Greenside
seems to know what he is talking about
Member # 10
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posted August 26, 2007 01:07 PM
Tim, did you attempt to locate them after the fire?
Posts: 719 | From: IA | Registered: Jan 2003
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TA17Rem
Hello, I'm the legendary Tim Anderson, Southern Minneesota Know it all
Member # 794
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posted August 26, 2007 02:08 PM
![[Razz]](tongue.gif) [ March 28, 2010, 07:16 PM: Message edited by: TA17Rem ]
-------------------- What if I told you, the left wing and right wing both belong to same bird!
Posts: 5614 | From: S.D. | Registered: Jan 2006
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Randy Roede
"It's Roede, like in Yotie
Member # 1273
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posted August 26, 2007 04:29 PM
Tim your welcome. Hope it works out.
When is your usual bean harvest? Mid to late Sept. Do they cut much corn for silage there? Alfalfa fields?
Tim B. do your coyotes bring good money in the winter. Curious about the quality of AZ fur.
-------------------- The only person dumber than the village idiot is the person who argues with him!
Posts: 669 | From: Pierre SD | Registered: Mar 2007
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TA17Rem
Hello, I'm the legendary Tim Anderson, Southern Minneesota Know it all
Member # 794
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posted August 26, 2007 05:18 PM
![[Razz]](tongue.gif) [ March 28, 2010, 07:17 PM: Message edited by: TA17Rem ]
-------------------- What if I told you, the left wing and right wing both belong to same bird!
Posts: 5614 | From: S.D. | Registered: Jan 2006
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TA17Rem
Hello, I'm the legendary Tim Anderson, Southern Minneesota Know it all
Member # 794
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posted August 26, 2007 05:40 PM
![[Razz]](tongue.gif) [ March 28, 2010, 07:17 PM: Message edited by: TA17Rem ]
-------------------- What if I told you, the left wing and right wing both belong to same bird!
Posts: 5614 | From: S.D. | Registered: Jan 2006
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Greenside
seems to know what he is talking about
Member # 10
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posted August 26, 2007 06:33 PM
Tim,
The first called coyote that I shot went something like this: My partner and I walked a couple of hundred of yard into a farm section. We jumped a fence and I sat down in the fence line and Mike proceeded maybe another 50 or 60 yards into a sloping away bean stubble field. I was covering the fence line to the left and also a cut that ran through the beans and Mike was covering the cut to the front and right. After a couple of howls followed by a short pause that went into distress cries a coyote jumped the fence to my immediate right and ran directly to Mike, stopping maybe 10 or so yards from him. He looked at Mikes back for a second or two and then ran back towards the fence and stopped again about 10 yards from the fence, turning to look back at Mike. That’s where he went down.
You can read into this anything you want, but you’ll be totally amazed at what you can get away with in corn and bean stubble when it comes to setting up on coyote.
quote:
Any ideas on where to set up when calling cut fields?
Depending on the terrian you might find yourself calling from and in cut fields(stubble). [ August 26, 2007, 06:36 PM: Message edited by: Greenside ]
Posts: 719 | From: IA | Registered: Jan 2003
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Andy L
HI, I'M THE NEW MODERATOR OF THE CENTRAL MISSOURI FORUM, PULL MY FINGER!
Member # 642
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posted August 26, 2007 07:05 PM
Tim, I got two AZ coyotes tanned right behind me on the wall. One of them Blaine Eddy sent me that he killed when we hunted SE AZ together.
He remarked that it was every bit as good as the Nevada and UT coyotes he kills, if that tells you anything.
-------------------- Andy
Posts: 2645 | From: Central Missouri | Registered: Apr 2005
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Norm
Knows what it's all about
Member # 240
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posted August 26, 2007 07:15 PM
depends on the terrain of the stubble field... if it is flat as a pancake... along a fence row is always a good place to setup from..
if it is sloping, there tend to be some drainage sloughs or terraces... setting up at the top of the draingage or on the back side of a terrace is always something to consider...
-------------------- Carpe Diem
Posts: 778 | From: Phx AZ | Registered: Oct 2003
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