Red Horse
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2010
- Messages
- 1,160
- Location
- Bolton, MA
- Tractor
- Deere 655ZTrak, Deere 4720 Cab, 400 X LT 155
I think the OP just wants to sting them, not injure them, thus a pellet gun is the way to go. A .22 would be better than a .177 due to the larger frontal area which will be less likely to penetrate, especially with flat nose pellets. The break action guns are very convenient and fast to load but would penetrate a coyote hide. Maybe the main spring could be shortened a little bit to reduce the power.
Don't use a firearm any place you're not supposed to or where it's unsafe. You can get into a lot of trouble.
Correct- I don't want to kill them-just "remind" them its not a "safe place" And I'm thinking a "pump Up" gun is the best bet for doing that. I have a Crosman pistol that I bought for getting squirrels out of my bird feeders and discovered that at 20' even 3 strokes was deadly. And correct on the safety issue- against the law to fire within 500 ft of a house.
If the OP has a 'cheap' 22 bolt action rifle that can load a single shot, try a 22 nail gun cartridge 'blank' and fairly cheap at Lowe's. The sound may be enough to spook the coyote from coming back. Otherwise a 177 pellet rifle, which is good as well for small pests. I have a Benjamin break action 22 pellet rifle that will hold air for a week or better.
I sort of know the town where the OP lives and guessing most that reside in the town (as work in Boston/live in the 'country') are 'sensitive' to things like firearms and gun shots. Difficult to get normal 22LR in MA, never mind varieties of subsonic loads and mail order is out of the question.
I do have an old single shot bolt action 22 but that is not an option as stated above-also have a nice Marlin 39A that holds about 13 LR's but again not an option. And I still have a few 22 "bird shot" shells-most people never heard of them- but they are probably 50 years old-and when I was a kid my next door neighbor bought the single shot for squirrels with the bird shot-needless to say not good for rifling in barrel! He gave me the rifle and the shells. And you are right- I have neighbors that would go nuts if they knew I was shooting anything. My house was built 28 years ago on what was an open farmed field-never saw any critters back then-today? Coyotes and bobcats!