• If you are being asked to change your password, and unsure how to do it, follow these instructions. Click here

Ramblings and Such From Hunting Coyote

Yes, it's windy in those two counties for sure. We get some nice sunrises and sunsets from the amount of dust in the air because of the wind. This year they have been really nice because of other people's misfortune, the wildfires smoke in the air but that's still better than the radioactive dust from the atomic bomb trials of the mid- 1900's.
 
I have seen them up in the high country along the creeks but mostly in the lower areas along the rivers and creeks where they have trees and brush cover. The last couple of months I been seeing them traveling out some distances from the normal travel areas being out in some of the prairie areas. They have been traveling to some of the cattle feed lots a couple of miles from any body of water other than the cattle watering tanks eating silage and grain the cattle are being fed. When I was a kid, we lived up at 7000 feet elevation, during the summer months, and every evening a coon would come feed at the trash barrel, mom got to leaving her a pancake or some biscuits, by mid-June she brought her cubs, six of them, with her. she came back for a couple of years in the summertime. Even the birds left there for the winter. You can go up in the mountains here in January and February and not see even a rabbit track all day long or hear a bird. I've been up there to feed cattle, and it was a nice warm morning but by noon the wind was blowing 20 plus mph with snow picked up and 5 or 6 feet high where if you stood in the bed of your truck all you could see was a white blanket of snow moving at ground level and clear blue skies above. The snow drifting in so fast that you couldn't shovel it out fast enough. But I've also been up there when it would be calm and clear above freezing but if you were down along the rive at 4500 feet elevation it would be zero or below with the valley full of smog. Most of the racoons stay down lower.
 
There are a lot of them at this time, due to the low prices of fur. Yes, there are several people that do hunt them with dogs. I'm not up on the regulations for hunting them with dogs and hunting them in general now but the Fish and Game department in Cheyene has a good web site and some toll-free numbers. They were at one time considered a varmint the landowners and those regulations would be a major concern with running dogs. Several years back A guy told me he had a beagle hound that came wondering in, it wasn't a beagle it was a walker I called the number on the collar, and she had been missing for a week. He had a 1000.00 reward on her return she was a high dollar coon dog, we didn't want the reward she got home and when he came to pick her up, she clearly was ready to go home with him. Gary a friend of mine in southern Indiana has a walker that he was offered 25000.00 for and turned it down.
 
I have an 8-foot snare, and an 8-foot extension cable laid out then connected to each other, every boiler maker, iron worker and millwright knows you don't hook two steel chokers or nylon slings together like this, but we all have seen it done. The third picture shows it hooked up to the post and the effective length reduced from 16 feet to 8 feet by wrapping it through the wire once, then how the extra cable is woven in the fence to keep it off of the ground but yet allow the coyote to pull it out and use it up for entanglement. The last picture shows a new dig under and maybe a better view of how the snare is anchored and the extra cable kept off of the ground and not allowing it to interfere with the snare's function or keeping it properly set up.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_1271.jpg
    IMG_1271.jpg
    624.8 KB · Views: 7
  • IMG_1272.jpg
    IMG_1272.jpg
    602.7 KB · Views: 8
  • IMG_1273.jpg
    IMG_1273.jpg
    426.3 KB · Views: 7
  • IMG_1274.jpg
    IMG_1274.jpg
    694.9 KB · Views: 8
Top