the old grind
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2012
- Messages
- 4,412
- Location
- Mid-Michigan
- Tractor
- NH T-1520 HST, NH TC33DA HST, Case DX26 HST, .Terramite T5C, . NH L785
.. The experts claim that if you kill a couple yotes they just breed at a higher rate and the population stays the same. Ed
Has to be understood in a scale of time and territory, as pressured populations of many species bear this out.
Two coyotes may become ten or more, but take more than a year to do so. (time for a season of foals/calves/lambs/kids to outgrow their vulnerability to solo or pair attacks and join in 'herd' defenses?)
Open country where pack territories overlap makes them harder to 'clean up' vs in the gaps between suburbs of more populous areas. (plenty of rabbits in the yard due to effective hunting/trapping pressure?)
Wherever coyotes appear they should be considered 'here to stay', becoming part of the local ecology. (True, you can't get 'em all, but finally something you can actually hunt with an AR-15 vs dots on paper.
Too many folks here (So MI's 'shotgun zone' during deer season) think that their center fires aren't allowed the rest of the year and won't hunt them. Fox & coyote are 'open' to hunt here from July 15 to Apr 15 with small game license, trapping Oct thru Feb with fur handlers license. Caliber/Gauge not specified except during firearm deer season. (rimfire and daytime hunting only, then)
From MIDNR: "Raccoon and Coyote may be taken on private property by a property owner or designee all year if they are doing or about to do damage on private property. A license or written permit is not needed."
Your word against someone's on that 'threat/damage' bit.
btw, 32 snares set ~1 mi from here and fingers crossed that we'll have another night in the fur shed soon with lots of coffee to guzzle and 'blood on our hands' if we can skin 'em out before they freeze stiff.