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Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
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<blockquote data-quote="NEMTHunter" data-source="post: 1587373" data-attributes="member: 77631"><p>Do you have a picture of the mount? I would love to see it. I am not saying they will not or can not cross breed. Most All canine's can cross breed. After all they are canines. We used to raise wolves and they ranged from pure to to crossed with different dogs. They interesting thing is you could tell the ones crossed even when it was mostly wolf. You cant hid the dog trait at all. Even when crossing with a wolf with a dog that has wolf in it's breeding. There's to much differences for them to come out looking like a wolf.</p><p></p><p>Wolves and Dogs and Coyote all look different. Yes they can look somewhat alike. But they are completely different when you look at them. They may even share some of the same coat patterns. But its still different.</p><p></p><p>As a side note. If those coyotes (that are part wolf) are crossing in from Canada. Then you would have wolves to. They are some of the biggest travelers in the canine Family. They get around big time.</p><p></p><p>After all they claim all yotes in the east are crossed with wolf and dog. BUT the interesting thing is. Places that have studied into it say they are not breeding in the wild. BUT are crosses from years ago. Kind of like are crosses today. People take animals into captivity and cross them. They same place went on to say there is no such thing as a coywolf. Since ALL eastern coyotes are a mix of Dog and wolf and coyote. I will say this. Eastern Coyotes are not cookie cutter stamped like they are out here. They are to many that look like Dog but then you get the ones that look like a normal coyote. </p><p></p><p>Per there study. Coyotes in the Northeast are mostly (60%-84%) coyote, with lesser amounts of wolf (8%-25%) and dog (8%-11%). Start moving south or east and this mixture slowly changes. Virginia animals average more dog than wolf (85%:2%:13% coyote:wolf:dog) while coyotes from the Deep South had just a dash of wolf and dog genes mixed in (91%:4%:5% coyote:wolf:dog). Tests show that there are no animals that are just coyote and wolf (that is, a coywolf), and some eastern coyotes that have almost no wolf at all.</p><p></p><p>Knowing how messed up all there studies are. Its hard for me to believe one way or another. Two places can do the same study and say two different things.</p><p></p><p>Either way. Its still of the canine family. And should be treated as such <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite8" alt=":D" title="Big Grin :D" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":D" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="NEMTHunter, post: 1587373, member: 77631"] Do you have a picture of the mount? I would love to see it. I am not saying they will not or can not cross breed. Most All canine's can cross breed. After all they are canines. We used to raise wolves and they ranged from pure to to crossed with different dogs. They interesting thing is you could tell the ones crossed even when it was mostly wolf. You cant hid the dog trait at all. Even when crossing with a wolf with a dog that has wolf in it's breeding. There's to much differences for them to come out looking like a wolf. Wolves and Dogs and Coyote all look different. Yes they can look somewhat alike. But they are completely different when you look at them. They may even share some of the same coat patterns. But its still different. As a side note. If those coyotes (that are part wolf) are crossing in from Canada. Then you would have wolves to. They are some of the biggest travelers in the canine Family. They get around big time. After all they claim all yotes in the east are crossed with wolf and dog. BUT the interesting thing is. Places that have studied into it say they are not breeding in the wild. BUT are crosses from years ago. Kind of like are crosses today. People take animals into captivity and cross them. They same place went on to say there is no such thing as a coywolf. Since ALL eastern coyotes are a mix of Dog and wolf and coyote. I will say this. Eastern Coyotes are not cookie cutter stamped like they are out here. They are to many that look like Dog but then you get the ones that look like a normal coyote. Per there study. Coyotes in the Northeast are mostly (60%-84%) coyote, with lesser amounts of wolf (8%-25%) and dog (8%-11%). Start moving south or east and this mixture slowly changes. Virginia animals average more dog than wolf (85%:2%:13% coyote:wolf:dog) while coyotes from the Deep South had just a dash of wolf and dog genes mixed in (91%:4%:5% coyote:wolf:dog). Tests show that there are no animals that are just coyote and wolf (that is, a coywolf), and some eastern coyotes that have almost no wolf at all. Knowing how messed up all there studies are. Its hard for me to believe one way or another. Two places can do the same study and say two different things. Either way. Its still of the canine family. And should be treated as such :D [/QUOTE]
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