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Teaching An Old Dog New Coyote Hunting Tricks By Justin Shireman
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<blockquote data-quote="eyeball 2" data-source="post: 498956" data-attributes="member: 8976"><p>sorry but i must disagree with you about a few things. in west texas i hunt several ranches of 50-250 sections, and huge areas of blm in southern new mexico.. normally coyotes are shot almost downwind. if you let them get completely downwind you will only get a running shot. almost only in the fall , with a lot of young around, do any come at you from upwind. normally they will come from crosswind a couple hundred yards out and circle downwind to get the scent before comming in. smart dogs often stay out 300-500 yards and in the high prarie love grass you wont see them without binocs because they blend in. a coyote face is hard to see at 300 yards in tall grass if it's sitting there looking for you. sometimes they come loping by a hundred yards out, from crosswind, and wont stop for a shot before catching scent and turning on the speed, no matter what you do. even a bark or howl just speeds up their retreat. i'm really starting to think they are getting our calls figured out. thanks, rc</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="eyeball 2, post: 498956, member: 8976"] sorry but i must disagree with you about a few things. in west texas i hunt several ranches of 50-250 sections, and huge areas of blm in southern new mexico.. normally coyotes are shot almost downwind. if you let them get completely downwind you will only get a running shot. almost only in the fall , with a lot of young around, do any come at you from upwind. normally they will come from crosswind a couple hundred yards out and circle downwind to get the scent before comming in. smart dogs often stay out 300-500 yards and in the high prarie love grass you wont see them without binocs because they blend in. a coyote face is hard to see at 300 yards in tall grass if it's sitting there looking for you. sometimes they come loping by a hundred yards out, from crosswind, and wont stop for a shot before catching scent and turning on the speed, no matter what you do. even a bark or howl just speeds up their retreat. i'm really starting to think they are getting our calls figured out. thanks, rc [/QUOTE]
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Teaching An Old Dog New Coyote Hunting Tricks By Justin Shireman
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