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Payback's a b**** (pictures)
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<blockquote data-quote="elmerkeithclone" data-source="post: 1429281" data-attributes="member: 104345"><p>Back when I was a kid in Iowa there was no such thing as a coyote in these parts. Along about 1970 we started seeing them more often when pheasant hunting. By 1980 their numbers had exploded. In 1982 we killed 138 coyotes and never got more than 10 miles from Grinnell, Iowa. Now for the most part the only time that you can call a coyote is in the fall before all the idiots with calls and not a lick of knowhow have them all educated. If you go sit in a brush pile all camoed up in the middle of January and see a coyote a 1/4 to 1/2 mile away then you best have played the wind right and planted yourself in his travel corridor. If you use any kind of call that late in the season the coyote will shift gears in the opposite direction. They are so call shy that it's counterproductive to even try. </p><p></p><p>There is no such thing as a farm cat anymore as the coyotes consider them a main staple. By February the coyotes are coming into town at night to eat pets and garbage. If a coyote will do that when hungry then I would imagine that a wolf would too.</p><p></p><p>When did our government ever regulate anything correctly....never!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="elmerkeithclone, post: 1429281, member: 104345"] Back when I was a kid in Iowa there was no such thing as a coyote in these parts. Along about 1970 we started seeing them more often when pheasant hunting. By 1980 their numbers had exploded. In 1982 we killed 138 coyotes and never got more than 10 miles from Grinnell, Iowa. Now for the most part the only time that you can call a coyote is in the fall before all the idiots with calls and not a lick of knowhow have them all educated. If you go sit in a brush pile all camoed up in the middle of January and see a coyote a 1/4 to 1/2 mile away then you best have played the wind right and planted yourself in his travel corridor. If you use any kind of call that late in the season the coyote will shift gears in the opposite direction. They are so call shy that it's counterproductive to even try. There is no such thing as a farm cat anymore as the coyotes consider them a main staple. By February the coyotes are coming into town at night to eat pets and garbage. If a coyote will do that when hungry then I would imagine that a wolf would too. When did our government ever regulate anything correctly....never! [/QUOTE]
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