Coyote problem

by Anonomous
(Glade Park Resident)

I live north of the store, just north of BS Rd and west of 16 1/2 Rd. Coyotes are pretty vocal at night in this area particularly in the trail canyon wash. There are atleast 3 different dens in the wash and around on the surrounding hills. From experience, I've found that if you let these bugers keep multiplying and hanging around, they'll move in to your chicken pen, kill your cats and dogs, and just become an overall nuisance! I'm interested in doing some hunting around the area if possible but need ok from landowners to exterminate from the wash area. Any property owners who don't mind, please comment on here and I'll get ahold of you about it... Thanks!

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Nov 09, 2015
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Nice
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Jun 22, 2015
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Good post
by: Frederik Rosenbaum

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Apr 30, 2014
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Coyote
by: Anonymous

Just read post; We live in the area you are talking about. You don't have our permission to kill coyotes on our property. You may end up killing one of my dogs, which by the way are livestock protection dogs, one of them could be mistaken for a coyote. So far the coyotes are respecting our dogs. No Killing is necessary.

Feb 26, 2014
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To Dave Brach
by: Anonymous

Thanks for the education... I myself am a female land and stock owner, conservative hunter, and have a positive acquaintance with the local DOW game warden. I agree with you that no wildlife should be obliterated from their habitat, short of prairie dogs & other disease carrying rodents, and that each species has its niche in the food chain. But ironically last night as I finished reading your liberally informative post, my 2 dogs (who are fenced in) began to raise all kinds of hell, and i heard some extremely close coyote howling. I turned on my back light and saw a coyote trot off from my back yard. Needless to say, with the help of a dog chase & my shotgun, he ran off, though I know he was right down in my field for awhile.
Without proper "weeding out" and control of any wild species, they become a problem, whether to human populated areas or open country. Look at the bear population right now. Anyone that runs a ranch of any size in this area will tell you that the bear population is above "normal", which means there is not enough food source for them to survive in the wild without feeding on fawns, calves, & lambs. That's why they didn't give out many deer tags last year. Deer pop is down.
But thank you again for your insight. If I was fortunate enough to be able to sit in my home daily and monitor the goings on of my community from an environmentalistic point of view (snuggled up with a little lap dog), I would have possibly thought differently about killing poor defenseless coyotes...

Feb 26, 2014
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To Dave Brach
by: Anonymous

Thanks for the education... I myself am a female land and stock owner, conservative hunter, and have a positive acquaintance with the local DOW game warden. I agree with you that no wildlife should be obliterated from their habitat, short of prairie dogs & other disease carrying rodents, and that each species has its niche in the food chain. But ironically last night as I finished reading your liberally informative post, my 2 dogs (who are fenced in) began to raise all kinds of hell, and i heard some extremely close coyote howling. I turned on my back light and saw a coyote trot off from my back yard. Needless to say, with the help of a dog chase & my shotgun, he ran off, though I know he was right down in my field for awhile.
Without proper "weeding out" and control of any wild species, they become a problem, whether to human populated areas or open country. Look at the bear population right now. Anyone that runs a ranch of any size in this area will tell you that the bear population is above "normal", which means there is not enough food source for them to survive in the wild without feeding on fawns, calves, & lambs. That's why they didn't give out many deer tags last year. Deer pop is down.
But thank you again for your insight. If I was fortunate enough to be able to sit in my home daily and monitor the goings on of my community from an environmentalistic point of view (snuggled up with a little lap dog), I would have possibly thought differently about killing poor defenseless coyotes...

Feb 25, 2014
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Food Chain - Think about it...
by: Dave F. Brach

Coyotes are a vital part of the ecosystem and the food chain. They should be managed but not erased from the earth. Currently the Coyote season is 24/7, 365 days a year, intense.

I am equally tired of camo-colored vehicles full of people with high power, long range weapons patrolling every dirt road, all day long and every night, on Glade Park. Your animals are far more likely to take a stray bullet than be killed by a coyote.

There are places where Coyotes don't bother - towns and cities, perhaps you selected the wrong place to live.

We lived in the Mojave Desert for 4 years. The Coyote killers from Los Angeles had long since eliminated this predator, and all other predators they could shoot from a vehicle. Our problem in 1975 was rodents, millions of rodents. The only thing to prey on the rodents was snakes. Pacific Rattlers grow in excess of 6 feet, they eat cats, if you get bit you have 10 minutes until lights out. I would far rather loose an animal to a coyote than get bit by a snake.

Think carefully about what you are doing. Control is necessary, extinction is not. What predator or disease will rise to replace your Coyotes??? They will be replaced, Mother Nature works that way.

Please do not trespass or hunt on my property - thanks

Dave...

Feb 05, 2014
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Coyote problem
by: Anonymous

I live in Indiana right now in the country, possibly moving up to Glade Park. Coyotes are a major problem.They are not afraid of people any more. It has become a major issue attacking livestock, taking dogs and cats. There are a ton of them here.
I do not think it should be open season on them but I do believe they do need controlled by educated responsible hunters. Their gestation is like a dogs and they can and will populate FAST.

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