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Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Electronic Call testing?
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<blockquote data-quote="Deleted member 115360" data-source="post: 2566500"><p>There is this black hole in predator calling that we all fall into. We cannot differentiate between what sounds great to a predator, and what sounds great to us. If you've done this for a while, you know that in most cases, they don't really know what they are hearing, they just know it's something that's already having a bad day and might make an easy meal. I think sound quality matters, but it might not. I think it's all about finding the tempo, frequency, and volume combo that hits them right at that exact moment, and that's mostly luck. You listen to Tony Tebbe, and he plays nonstop prey distress sounds, constantly switching sounds, never pausing, loud as heck, and he kills piles of coyotes. Other pros will play quiet sounds, not more than one type of prey distress on a stand, and the volume very low, and they will kill tons of coyotes. Some great coyote slayers howl first on every stand, meanwhile other pros will say they only howl during breeding/ denning season, and they both kill plenty. I think the sounds are almost all that matter. If we could ever understand how they hear things, we might be able to increase our success exponentially, but I don't know if that will ever happen. The call itself might be the least important part of the equation.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Deleted member 115360, post: 2566500"] There is this black hole in predator calling that we all fall into. We cannot differentiate between what sounds great to a predator, and what sounds great to us. If you've done this for a while, you know that in most cases, they don't really know what they are hearing, they just know it's something that's already having a bad day and might make an easy meal. I think sound quality matters, but it might not. I think it's all about finding the tempo, frequency, and volume combo that hits them right at that exact moment, and that's mostly luck. You listen to Tony Tebbe, and he plays nonstop prey distress sounds, constantly switching sounds, never pausing, loud as heck, and he kills piles of coyotes. Other pros will play quiet sounds, not more than one type of prey distress on a stand, and the volume very low, and they will kill tons of coyotes. Some great coyote slayers howl first on every stand, meanwhile other pros will say they only howl during breeding/ denning season, and they both kill plenty. I think the sounds are almost all that matter. If we could ever understand how they hear things, we might be able to increase our success exponentially, but I don't know if that will ever happen. The call itself might be the least important part of the equation. [/QUOTE]
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Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Electronic Call testing?
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