The New Huntmastersbbs!


Post New Topic  New Poll  Post A Reply
my profile | search | faq | forum home
  next oldest topic   next newest topic
» The New Huntmastersbbs!   » Predator forum   » Coyote Behavior Question (Page 1)

 - UBBFriend: Email this page to someone!  
This topic comprises 2 pages: 1  2 
 
Author Topic: Coyote Behavior Question
ursus21
2nd place, John Denver lookalike Contest
Member # 3556

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 08:35 AM      Profile for ursus21           Edit/Delete Post 
Last night I witnessed a behavior I have seen several times before. It seems a little odd to me and I'm not quite sure what to make of it? As I was calling a coyote went berserk around 500 yards away. He was barking his fool head off and pacing back and fourth just like a dog behind a chain link fence. To drown him out I went to high pitched coyote pup in distress sounds. I watched the coyote in my binos to see what he would do. He shut up and actually started to work his way towads me. However I caught movement out of the corner of my eye and had the coyote in the photo screaming in and nearly on top of me. Bino's down, gun up, bark, coyote stopped...dead coyote. Anyway the behavior I don't fully understand is the barking coyote pacing all over creating and making a real ruckus. I've seen this before and each time another coyote has come charging in. There was no way that barking coyote busted me as I was tucked in and had the wind in my favor. At first I thought that perhaps coyotes that do this were suspecting something and trying to warn the whole world to not go to the call. However, since it does not seem to stop other coyotes, and if anything motivates them to come in even harder I'm starting to rethink it. Now I'm wondering if it's more of a "Hey you S.O.B. your beating me to the animal and I can't do anything other than bark at you from here." Anyway I consider many of you to be pretty smart feller's and I'm wondering what your thoughts are on this?
 -

Posts: 780 | From: Montana | Registered: Jan 2010  |  IP: Logged
Rich
2,000th post PAKMAN
Member # 112

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 09:50 AM      Profile for Rich   Author's Homepage   Email Rich         Edit/Delete Post 
I believe that your barking, pacing coyote had heard the sound you were playing, and had a bad experience with same. I believe the yapping is caused by frustration of a coyote that wants to come in and knows something ain't right. I do not believe that this yapping is meant to warn other coyotes.

--------------------
If you call the coyotes in close, you won't NEED a high dollar range finder.

Posts: 2854 | From: Iowa | Registered: Feb 2003  |  IP: Logged
ursus21
2nd place, John Denver lookalike Contest
Member # 3556

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 09:55 AM      Profile for ursus21           Edit/Delete Post 
Rich, I was kind'a thinking the same thing until I switched to a pup in distress and he started my direction. However the other coyote beat him there or perhaps he would have come all the way in. Seems odd that a little switch in sound would make him totally forget about the first sound. Then again maybe it did.
Posts: 780 | From: Montana | Registered: Jan 2010  |  IP: Logged
Greenside
seems to know what he is talking about
Member # 10

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 10:21 AM      Profile for Greenside           Edit/Delete Post 
He didn't like the sound, location or both and you can never rule out the fact that he might have busted you on the way in and you didn't spot him as he snuck out of there and retreated to what he thought was a safe distance. When you turned on that FP he was just telling you the game was over as far as he was concerned

As far as coming in he might have seen the other coyote before you spotted him and seeing that coyote might have been just enough to pull him your way.

Posts: 719 | From: IA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
Rich
2,000th post PAKMAN
Member # 112

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 10:23 AM      Profile for Rich   Author's Homepage   Email Rich         Edit/Delete Post 
ursus21,
Yes, I do believe it was your switch to the pup distress that caused your frustrated coyote to quickly forget it's frustration and come on in to investigate. My own area is too thick with cover to watch it happen, but I have talked to others who tell me that the change in sounds can work almost like magic sometimes. I also believe that coyotes in highly pressured area's are wising up to the constant screams from an E caller. Screaming less, and waiting in silence more, seems to be working better for quite a few folks these days. Thank you for describing your experience with that yapping, pacing coyote. It is this kind of information sharing that helps folks become better callers.

--------------------
If you call the coyotes in close, you won't NEED a high dollar range finder.

Posts: 2854 | From: Iowa | Registered: Feb 2003  |  IP: Logged
Rich
2,000th post PAKMAN
Member # 112

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 10:25 AM      Profile for Rich   Author's Homepage   Email Rich         Edit/Delete Post 
"As far as coming in he might have seen the other coyote before you spotted him and seeing that coyote might have been just enough to pull him your way."
----------------------
Good tip Mr. Greenside, thanks for that post.

--------------------
If you call the coyotes in close, you won't NEED a high dollar range finder.

Posts: 2854 | From: Iowa | Registered: Feb 2003  |  IP: Logged
ursus21
2nd place, John Denver lookalike Contest
Member # 3556

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 10:40 AM      Profile for ursus21           Edit/Delete Post 
Greenside, I do agree that perhaphs seeing the other coyote may have triggered him to come closer. However, no way he busted me. I had actually spotted him long before he started pitching his fit. I watched him cover about a 100 yards and then go behind some trees. I waited for him to come out, but he didn't. All of the sudden he starts barking like a fool and come running out of the little patch of trees. He's a good 500 yards away. I'm buried in a rock pile with tall grass around me, and the sun is directly in his eyes. So I know he did not see me. Now as for him hearing the call before. That is a definite possiblity but the last time he would have heard it was a year ago. A few weeks ago (on Labor Day) a partner and I called in a hard charger from the same area. We were set up perhaps 150 yards further to the North when a hard charger came barreling in. However the wind shifted and he got a nose full when he was around 150 yards away. He spun around and dove into the ravine behind him never to be seen again. The difference that day though is we did not use the CS-24. Used only hand calls. He came into a Ruffidawg. So I'm thinking there is something to the comment that he remembered a bad experience from the location...moreso than recognised the sound. On a side note, after dark as I was loading the dead coyote back in the truck I heard a howl. It came from the bottom of the ravine about 1/2 mile down the mountain from me. It went from a howl to barks and howls like he was pissed off and tattling on me again. I'm guessing it was the same coyote. With that said, any suggestions on how to kill this dog?
Posts: 780 | From: Montana | Registered: Jan 2010  |  IP: Logged
Cdog911
"There are some ideas so absurd only an intellectual could believe them."--George Orwell.
Member # 7

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 11:44 AM      Profile for Cdog911   Author's Homepage   Email Cdog911         Edit/Delete Post 
Set up in a different spot, different time of the day and use hand calls to produce a different type of sound. As Rich pointed out, be very conservative in your approach as far as sounds. A minute of distress and wait five to ten minutes. Be overly careful in concealing yourself and watching the cover for ears, etc.. as this coyote will probably make its approach more 'cat-like than your typical early season coyote. Basically, this coyote sounds like he's been to the dance at least once before and has not forgotten what he learned. Your objective will be to set up and offer something as far from anything else he's ever seen from all the other guys while not tipping your hand because of missing some detail. Sounds like a fun coyote to go after. As frustrating as they can be, they do give you a sense of true self-accomplishment when they go down.

--------------------
I am only one. But still, I am one. I cannot do everything, but still, I can do something; and, because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do something that I can do.

Posts: 5438 | From: The gun-lovin', gun-friendly wild, wild west | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
Greenside
seems to know what he is talking about
Member # 10

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 12:03 PM      Profile for Greenside           Edit/Delete Post 
quote:
However, no way he busted me.
Well you never know for sure. You leave the truck, maybe jump a fence or two, walk to the rock pile and sneak over it or around it and setup. Might have missed that small flash of the coyote going out of sight.

I must say, I've been busted more times than I care to admit. Walk in trying my best to stay concealed, even glassing the opposite slopes and then the "O SHIT" as you spot a coyote creasting the next ridge.

Well might as well call anyway since they might be more than that one around. Right? Then as soon as you start calling the coyote you just bumped starts barking his head off. Not a good deal as far as getting that coyote is concerned. Probably won't come in no matter what you throw at him. If you have a partner the best thing to do is have him sneak out and around him, while you keep the coyote occupied by barking back and distress calling. Just keep him talking so your partner can stalk him. Don't give him a chance to shut up, if you do he might just walk away and disappear.

How to get that coyote? Not sure, but the next morning a lone howl might bring him in. But my quess is that it's going to take a long walk to get in deeper and away from where you shot that first one. Maybe a 9 month old dispersing coyote howl? [Smile]

Posts: 719 | From: IA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
ursus21
2nd place, John Denver lookalike Contest
Member # 3556

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 12:17 PM      Profile for ursus21           Edit/Delete Post 
Greenside, I don't want to be misunderstood. I get busted now and then. Heck, probably more than I realize. However I saw this coyote before he saw me. I watched him coming in. He was calm and coming in at a steady fast walk into the call. He had a deep ravine to cross with a patch of trees on his side. He walked into the trees and the next time I saw him a few minutes later he was pitching a fit. I would think that if had seen me coming in that he would not have been heading into the call. On a side note I killed a really big old male in the same area last year. I'm thinking he was probably the top dog. I'm wondering this isn't his replacement I'm dealing with. It took nearly 45 minutes of calling to dupe that old male. What gave him away was a red tailed hawk that was following him up the draw towards me. Always did like hawks. [Smile]
Posts: 780 | From: Montana | Registered: Jan 2010  |  IP: Logged
Kokopelli
SENIOR DISCOUNT & Dispenser of Sage Advice
Member # 633

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 12:38 PM      Profile for Kokopelli   Author's Homepage           Edit/Delete Post 
Mayhap there are territorial boundry issues involved with the barking coyote honoring the resident responding coyote's turf????

Don't know & am not an expert; just thinking out loud.

--------------------
And lo, the Light of the Trump shown upon the Darkness and the Darkness could not comprehend it.

Posts: 7580 | From: Under a wandering star | Registered: Apr 2005  |  IP: Logged
Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 02:06 PM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
As far as I'm concerned, and not parsing the description in the initial post....a coyote can and will warn another coyote to danger. I have seen that too many times for it to be in doubt.

Now, the variables are many. Lots of times, a coyote will plunge into cover as you watch him respond to your stand, and never come out. He may be there in the concealment, watching, but you can't pick him out.

500 yards is five football fields, more or less, right? They say that (who's "they") a coyote doesn't have distance vision, like a pronghorn, for instance. My personal opinion is they can barely compete with humans, as far as identifying non moving objects at 500 yards. Me, I have mistaken fast moving bobcats at 500 yards a number of times, just because they were moving at coyote speeds. Those big ears help in identifying a coyote sneaking a look over a bush. Seems like a cat looks from the side of a bush, rather than over the top?

Okay, the behavior described is perfectly understandable, as far as catagorized as behavior that a coyote is guilty of. Why he does it is another thing. Yapping at the hunter and knowing he is there is a common thing. Forgetting his reason and approaching the call because of some other factor is also rather common, in my opinion. You just never know why a cautious coyote can change his mind and run into the stand without a care in the world. Ifr you just gave him a hurt pup, you can be confident that that's what did it. You could be wrong, too.

How many times have we read about two hunters being busted on stand, one guy makes a big deal of getting up and walking away, and the other guy sits tight and kills the coyote at reduced distance.

This described behavior is non remarkable, seems to me? If the question is: WHY? That's a deep subject.

Good hunting. LB

--------------------
EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 31462 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
ursus21
2nd place, John Denver lookalike Contest
Member # 3556

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 02:32 PM      Profile for ursus21           Edit/Delete Post 
Leonard, you must be getting long in the tooth as you are starting to repeat yourself. [Wink] You are correct it is not remarkable. The odd part is the fact that I've seen this happen several times and each time I killed another coyote that came in hard to the call as if it were trying to beat the barking/warning coyote. That's the part that is odd to me.
Posts: 780 | From: Montana | Registered: Jan 2010  |  IP: Logged
Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 02:42 PM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
Yes, maybe long in the teeth. I have been having computer problems for a couple weeks and it is causing me to lose patience, hence the double click. Please excuse.

As far as what you describe, one hung up and another responds from a different direction, congratulations. You have found a place with a lot of coyotes.

Good hunting. LB

--------------------
EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 31462 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
Rich
2,000th post PAKMAN
Member # 112

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 04:22 PM      Profile for Rich   Author's Homepage   Email Rich         Edit/Delete Post 
"As far as I'm concerned, and not parsing the description in the initial post....a coyote can and will warn another coyote to danger. I have seen that too many times for it to be in doubt."
---------------------------------
No doubt about that Leonard, but that "warning" is a short chopped off "Woof" ain't it? I believe that is a different sound than the frustrated "yap-yap- yap" of a coyote wanting to come in to the screams but knows something ain't quite right in Denmark.

--------------------
If you call the coyotes in close, you won't NEED a high dollar range finder.

Posts: 2854 | From: Iowa | Registered: Feb 2003  |  IP: Logged
TA17Rem
Hello, I'm the legendary Tim Anderson, Field Marshall, Southern Minneesota Sector
Member # 794

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 05:34 PM      Profile for TA17Rem   Email TA17Rem         Edit/Delete Post 
Can't say for sure but I would agree with Koko and say it could of been a territorial thing and the coyote was challengeing you or other coyote. Besides paceing back and fourth did the coyote have its tail tucked in and back arched with neck hairs raised and also scratching up the ground with back feet???

--------------------
What if I told you, the left wing and right wing both belong to same bird!

Posts: 5064 | From: S.D. | Registered: Jan 2006  |  IP: Logged
Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 6 posted September 30, 2010 05:52 PM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
Tim, you're kidding, right?

--------------------
EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 31462 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
TA17Rem
Hello, I'm the legendary Tim Anderson, Field Marshall, Southern Minneesota Sector
Member # 794

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 06:29 PM      Profile for TA17Rem   Email TA17Rem         Edit/Delete Post 
No Leonard!!

I get a few coyotes every year that behave very simular to what ursus21 described.
Most times the coyote is out aways from stand 1/4 mile or little more.. They will howl and give a few barks and if I reply with a howl or some other sound I can convince them to come in and when they do they come in so very slowly. Most stands have taken 45 minutes or longer to get them in close enough for a shot. When they do come into range they put on a big display, head down and tucked in, snareling and chomping of the mouth, back arched with tail tucked in tight, and scratching up the grass with back feet. Just a guess but I would call it agressive behavior ( terr. response).... [Smile]

All the coyotes called in doing this where old males and no other coyotes where present as far as I could tell...

[ September 30, 2010, 06:32 PM: Message edited by: TA17Rem ]

--------------------
What if I told you, the left wing and right wing both belong to same bird!

Posts: 5064 | From: S.D. | Registered: Jan 2006  |  IP: Logged
Leonard
HMFIC
Member # 2

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 06:46 PM      Profile for Leonard   Author's Homepage   Email Leonard         Edit/Delete Post 
quote:
back arched with tail tucked in tight
You see old males do this and believe it to be agressive behavior?

Good hunting. LB

--------------------
EL BEE Knows It All and Done It All.
Don't piss me off!

Posts: 31462 | From: Upland, CA | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
TA17Rem
Hello, I'm the legendary Tim Anderson, Field Marshall, Southern Minneesota Sector
Member # 794

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 06:57 PM      Profile for TA17Rem   Email TA17Rem         Edit/Delete Post 
Here is a link to what I'm talking about...
http://www.animalpicturesarchive.com/ArchOLD/1087534847.jpg

[ September 30, 2010, 06:58 PM: Message edited by: TA17Rem ]

--------------------
What if I told you, the left wing and right wing both belong to same bird!

Posts: 5064 | From: S.D. | Registered: Jan 2006  |  IP: Logged
Cdog911
"There are some ideas so absurd only an intellectual could believe them."--George Orwell.
Member # 7

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 07:10 PM      Profile for Cdog911   Author's Homepage   Email Cdog911         Edit/Delete Post 
The behavior ursus dscribed is exactly like what I saw the old male we were after last spring who herded the two yearlings away from where Kevin and I were set up. He, too, came toward us, but was actually just intercepting the two others coming to the call so he could run them away from us. He very much knew what we were and where we were at since he first appeared downwind of me, then after crossing through the half-mile fenceline, turned and bounced on his front legs while frantically barking at the other two coyotes between us but just out of our sight. I can guaren-damned-tee you he was doing his best to warn those pups off and when that didn't work, he went in and physically forced them out of harm's way.

BTW, we never did get him as he was always hanging tight to a half-section pasture owned by the cranky old fart that doesn't allow anyone to hunt nothing for no reason. Maybe if he dies before that coyote, his kids will let us in. [Wink]

--------------------
I am only one. But still, I am one. I cannot do everything, but still, I can do something; and, because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do something that I can do.

Posts: 5438 | From: The gun-lovin', gun-friendly wild, wild west | Registered: Jan 2003  |  IP: Logged
Rich
2,000th post PAKMAN
Member # 112

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 07:40 PM      Profile for Rich   Author's Homepage   Email Rich         Edit/Delete Post 
It is not uncommon to see (or hear) coyotes doing the old Bark/howl that I know as a challenge howl, when the coyote is on wrong side of it's territorial boundary and hears my calls. This sound is all together different than the yapping of a frustrated coyote. The coyote in Tim's photo is certainly one pissed off coyote, and I can almost hear the bark/howls. Tim is hard of hearing, but he is right about the offensive stance. From size of that coyote's head, I would guess that it is a female but I wouldn't bet the farm on it. [Wink]

--------------------
If you call the coyotes in close, you won't NEED a high dollar range finder.

Posts: 2854 | From: Iowa | Registered: Feb 2003  |  IP: Logged
Randy Roede
"It's Roede, like in Yotie
Member # 1273

Icon 1 posted September 30, 2010 09:05 PM      Profile for Randy Roede   Email Randy Roede         Edit/Delete Post 
Troy, you see this alot when family groups are still intact. Adult will bark or woof the YOY back away from what may be danger. Will patrol a line to keep them back then when sure come fight. Not always depends on the coyotes personality. Shaw and I just had a similar discusion about this while he was here for the VHA deal. Les had a similar scenario on one of his recent shows. IMO. The coyote is warning its pups to stay back, I would assume the change from a howl of a wondering coyote to they may have one of our pups in trouble was the trigger. A decoy dog may have triggered it a little sooner or could have blown it all up, You never know for sure. You see that quite a bit with the dog dennin just as you described.

--------------------
The only person dumber than the village idiot is the person who argues with him!

Posts: 669 | From: Pierre SD | Registered: Mar 2007  |  IP: Logged
knockemdown
Our staff photo editing Guru, par excellence
Member # 3588

Icon 1 posted October 01, 2010 05:36 AM      Profile for knockemdown   Author's Homepage           Edit/Delete Post 
I had a similar situation as Mr. Roede described, on my 2nd stand last season (date 10/2).

I had my farmer friend along (on his land) where I had called a pair (killed one) the day before. He was anxious to go, seeing one on the ground...

On this particular stand, I was calling up into a knoll back in the woods above an active heifer pasture. A 1 acre pond between us and the knoll offered a clear view across to the woods line. And natural cover surrounding the pond (crab apples & grown goldenrod) allowed for a coyote to slink around either side in relative security with just enough breaks in the cover for shot ops. The wind was blowing from the knoll out across the pond and into the pasture. Almost an ideal cross wind setup...

Anyhoo, I set farmer up to watch the fencerow looking up toward the pond & left, and I covered the woodline and brush toward the distant downwind (I'm a dog hog!) We took sides against a huge cherry tree...

After some soft distress calls about 4 minutes in to this pre-dusk sit, I spotted a set of ears slinking through the goldenrod above the pasture. OH YEAH!
This coyote was in NO rush to come to the calls, and still at least 300yds out across. We sat quietly to wait it out and make up it's mind, with a lip squeak now & again to keep the ears perked...
A minute or two later, a 'threat' type series of howls & barks erupts from our far left. Turns out, another coyote had emerged from the adjoining woodlot (maybe 400yds away( and had begun an approach mirroring ours. NOT GOOD! Reckon it saw our ATVs, despite ditching them behind some round bales. Or caught a whiff of our boot tracks on the way in...

Either way, that coyote gave us the dickens!!! It sounded like a female, but can't know for sure. Anyway, as I wait for farmer's .06 to belch, I watch my 'ears' make a 180' and retreat with a flash of fur diving for the far woodline across the pasture...

In the ensuing minutes, I tried to 'challenge' that barker, but it only served to piss off the rest of the pack back up on that knoll. They went into a barkin' & howlin' frenzy for a spell, as we listened with wide eyes. But we never did see another coyote. Dusk settled in and we eased on outta there, as the pack contiuned to howl from further & further away...

Could this have been a parental warning situation?
It made sense to me and the time, and even more so now.
Consequently, I'm planning on making that VERY same stand this weekend, but with a different approach and possibly a shotgunner at the point of the far woodlot we were busted from. We'll just hafta see if the wind will let us do it...

[ October 01, 2010, 05:39 AM: Message edited by: knockemdown ]

Posts: 2202 | From: behind fascist lines | Registered: Mar 2010  |  IP: Logged
coyote whacker
Knows what it's all about
Member # 639

Icon 1 posted October 01, 2010 07:20 PM      Profile for coyote whacker           Edit/Delete Post 
I would go with the warning bark theory at this time of year versus the territorial aspects at this time of year.

Even durring the summer I have a sound after I shoot coyote 1 and the 2nd generaly the female will bark her head off at this sound, not a territorial thing so much as a warning but I think they aren;t sure what to do about it, come in or stay pat and warn the rest.

--------------------
This is done on my time and my dime. My views may differ from those of others!

Posts: 376 | From: USA | Registered: Apr 2005  |  IP: Logged


All times are Pacific
This topic comprises 2 pages: 1  2 
 
Post New Topic  New Poll  Post A Reply Close Topic    Move Topic    Delete Topic next oldest topic   next newest topic
 - Printer-friendly view of this topic
Hop To:

Contact Us | Huntmasters



Powered by Infopop Corporation
UBB.classicTM 6.3.0