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Hunting
Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Ramblings and Such From Hunting Coyote
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<blockquote data-quote="DSheetz" data-source="post: 2734078" data-attributes="member: 91783"><p>Here we have WYDOT travel information on the computer and you can look at the different web cams, on the different highways and towns or cities in the state. I suspect that every state has their own versions of it. Having lived the vast majority of my life here and having my Grandparents to teach me I do have a good supply laid up as well as my truck is set up for the different types of things that can be encountered here. Still, I find it better to wait for the conditions to improve before venturing out and about. Yesterday my wife was telling me about a young woman trucker down on I-80 that was stuck at a rest stop with the road closed, she was inexperienced with the high winds being 110 lbs. she was afraid to get out of her truck to crank the gear down on her trailer and make it more stable so that it wouldn't blow over. She said that she was scared as she had ever been. When we go from the areas that we are used to living in, to another so many things change that we probably won't think about beforehand. Calling coyotes from one area has different aspects to it from one area to another but it also has some similarities as well. I have traveled to Montana and Southern Indiana to call coyotes and used the same howls in both of these states that I use here, and they reacted the same to them. The open terrain here has its advantages as compared to the brushy terrain of Indiana but then the brushy terrain has its own advantages just like our area has disadvantages it does as well but with a little thought and having a good basic understanding of the coyote it can be done.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DSheetz, post: 2734078, member: 91783"] Here we have WYDOT travel information on the computer and you can look at the different web cams, on the different highways and towns or cities in the state. I suspect that every state has their own versions of it. Having lived the vast majority of my life here and having my Grandparents to teach me I do have a good supply laid up as well as my truck is set up for the different types of things that can be encountered here. Still, I find it better to wait for the conditions to improve before venturing out and about. Yesterday my wife was telling me about a young woman trucker down on I-80 that was stuck at a rest stop with the road closed, she was inexperienced with the high winds being 110 lbs. she was afraid to get out of her truck to crank the gear down on her trailer and make it more stable so that it wouldn't blow over. She said that she was scared as she had ever been. When we go from the areas that we are used to living in, to another so many things change that we probably won't think about beforehand. Calling coyotes from one area has different aspects to it from one area to another but it also has some similarities as well. I have traveled to Montana and Southern Indiana to call coyotes and used the same howls in both of these states that I use here, and they reacted the same to them. The open terrain here has its advantages as compared to the brushy terrain of Indiana but then the brushy terrain has its own advantages just like our area has disadvantages it does as well but with a little thought and having a good basic understanding of the coyote it can be done. [/QUOTE]
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Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Ramblings and Such From Hunting Coyote
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