Westonium
Silver Member
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( U said that they looked like gray German Shepherd Dogs. I think maybe they were! Gray sable is a common GSD color. I would still build a good fenced play yard for your dogs.... )</font>
Grant's pass is very rural. I am guessing he is way out there. If they ARE German Shepherds, then they may be more dangerous than wolves because they are likely feral. They are just as bad as wolves at the least because they are so cunning. Wolves and wild dogs can and do hunt and kill coyotes. Food for thought.
Anyway the point here is that where this guy lives, any canine he sees on his property that isn't his, and doesn't have a collar, is deemed wild and dangerous.
You should read this history of coyotes in Kansas and maybe you'll understand why they aren't a problem now, but soon will be
That scientific paper published by the government pretty much applies all over the country. They used to poison coyotes all the way up to 1972. Coyotes went from eating small things to domestic and livestock and their numbers have blossomed over the last few decades. Sure, when the wolves re-populate there will be less coyotes but talk about a bitter cure.
That paper is a good read. I highly reccomend it.
Grant's pass is very rural. I am guessing he is way out there. If they ARE German Shepherds, then they may be more dangerous than wolves because they are likely feral. They are just as bad as wolves at the least because they are so cunning. Wolves and wild dogs can and do hunt and kill coyotes. Food for thought.
Anyway the point here is that where this guy lives, any canine he sees on his property that isn't his, and doesn't have a collar, is deemed wild and dangerous.
You should read this history of coyotes in Kansas and maybe you'll understand why they aren't a problem now, but soon will be
That scientific paper published by the government pretty much applies all over the country. They used to poison coyotes all the way up to 1972. Coyotes went from eating small things to domestic and livestock and their numbers have blossomed over the last few decades. Sure, when the wolves re-populate there will be less coyotes but talk about a bitter cure.
That paper is a good read. I highly reccomend it.