Byron South
New member
We have been getting a few new members, and with hunting season starting to get busy I'm sure we will start getting lots of new member signing up every day. With that said, we have lots of very experienced callers here and I thought it might be a good idea and very helpful for them to share a few of their personal tips or tricks they might have up their sleeve.
I'll start.
Last Saturday a friend and I had just got set up in a fence row looking into a wooded creek bottom we knew held a coyote or two. Just as we were getting settled in a coyote started threat barking at us. If your not familiar with this sound, it sounds like very sharp aggitated barks and yips often followed by a short, aggitated, howl. We knew right away we had been had, but unsure if the vocal coyote had made a positive ID of us. I let it go on for a minute or two and then started with a rabbit distress sound. This did nothing but further aggitate the coyote but did nothing to make it show itself. I then mixed in some threats back and mixed some coyote pup distresses in for good measure. After all this, still nothing. I turned to my buddy and told him to get comfortable as I intended to wait her out. We went silent and sure enough after about ten minutes the coyote could stand it no more. Curiosity had gotten the best of her. By being silent and not moving she assumed (guessing)that what ever had made all the racket had left. She decided further inspection of the situation was needed and eased up to get a look.
This is when she took possession of a 60 grain V-Max /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif.
Moral of the story is, if you are pretty confident you have a coyote close but it didn't respond, sometimes the silence is more than they can bear. Be patient, be still, and sometimes be silent, because they don't all come loping in.
Byron /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif
I'll start.
Last Saturday a friend and I had just got set up in a fence row looking into a wooded creek bottom we knew held a coyote or two. Just as we were getting settled in a coyote started threat barking at us. If your not familiar with this sound, it sounds like very sharp aggitated barks and yips often followed by a short, aggitated, howl. We knew right away we had been had, but unsure if the vocal coyote had made a positive ID of us. I let it go on for a minute or two and then started with a rabbit distress sound. This did nothing but further aggitate the coyote but did nothing to make it show itself. I then mixed in some threats back and mixed some coyote pup distresses in for good measure. After all this, still nothing. I turned to my buddy and told him to get comfortable as I intended to wait her out. We went silent and sure enough after about ten minutes the coyote could stand it no more. Curiosity had gotten the best of her. By being silent and not moving she assumed (guessing)that what ever had made all the racket had left. She decided further inspection of the situation was needed and eased up to get a look.
This is when she took possession of a 60 grain V-Max /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif.
Moral of the story is, if you are pretty confident you have a coyote close but it didn't respond, sometimes the silence is more than they can bear. Be patient, be still, and sometimes be silent, because they don't all come loping in.
Byron /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif