And then when the wolf population gets too high, you have to introduce bears into the area. After that? Landsharks.
On Thu, Oct 26, 2017 at 2:29 AM, Josh Reynolds <[email protected]> wrote: > If you kill one or more coyotes, when they take "call" at night, there > is suspicion that the lower number of calls can actually trigger the > females into having larger litters. > > If you want to reduce coyote populations you have to balance the > ecosystem by introducing wolves into the area... > > On Wed, Oct 25, 2017 at 3:18 PM, Larry Smith <[email protected]> wrote: >> Most likely take more than 3, but what coyotes do is >> work as a group. Several will chase the deer for a while, >> then the other group catches up and the first group rests. >> The deer gets no rest though and eventually they just wear >> it down. Once they can break a leg or get a good neck >> cut they just wait it out. >> >> About the only thing I will waste a good deer hunt on >> is a coyote, shoot them every chance I get... >> >> -- >> Larry Smith >> [email protected] >> >> On Wed October 25 2017 15:08, Bill Prince wrote: >>> I would think it would take more than 3 coyotes to nail a mule deer. >>> Although mule deer aren't particularly bright; they often run "just over >>> the next rise", then stop because they can't see the danger anymore. >>> >>> >>> bp >>> <part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com> >>> >>> On 10/25/2017 12:51 PM, Jaime Solorza wrote: >>> > Speaking of hunting, I saw three coyotes chasing a good size mule deer >>> > as I approached McKrittick canyon cutoff Monday about 7 am on my way >>> > to Orla,Texas. Deer was way ahead of them. wonder if they caught it..
