Let's Talk About American Coyotes

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  • čas přidán 30. 05. 2024
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    It's time we had a conversation about the coyote, a canine found only in North America.
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Komentáře • 3,6K

  • @LostinthePond
    @LostinthePond  Před 3 měsíci +78

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    • @stratcat3216
      @stratcat3216 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Come pet them.. they walk by my back fence daily.

    • @schrodingersgat4344
      @schrodingersgat4344 Před 3 měsíci

      Weird coyote story for you.
      I grew up in the hills of South Carolina. My first experience with them was a few miles S.E. of here.
      I was living over there and they would cruise through and pick off strays, and the occasional pet.*
      The things are like ghosts. There one second and gone the next.
      This is where it gets weird.
      We had a brief problem {in that location} with feral hogs.
      You would hear folks shooting, killing them or running them off, most nights. Tha was; before a half feral farm pig, got separated from a herd.
      He was a big one. 250lds, about 5 ft long. He was still a "pet" in his own head and very friendly.
      My kids were small. This made me weary of such a large animal.
      He shocked up in the woods behind my in-law's house.
      Another neighbor dropped by and looked him over. Healthy, fat and friendly*. He became just another "wild" critter to keep an eye on.
      It was during this assessment that an event occurred which bewildered me for years.
      [I'll continue in a reply]
      *Ours stayed inside at night or just got up high in a tree or a roof.
      * It let the guy hand feed it.

    • @schrodingersgat4344
      @schrodingersgat4344 Před 3 měsíci

      The church across the road was having an event in their detached meeting hall.
      Some fat kid saw the pig and decided he could just, walk over.
      He made it across before being called back and scolded by another church member. As he went, he announced "I'm coming back to get that pig."
      I return home from work to hear about this.
      Screwing with poachers is {and shall forever be} among my favorite activities. I loaded my pockets with fireworks, grabbed a rifle* and went to get between the pig and the church.
      A quick scan with the flashlight only revealed one thing to be "odd".
      You know those "lollipop" reflectors folks put at the ends of their drive?
      I spied a pair, but they were just inside the edge of the woods. Set about halfway between the inlaws place and the old farmhouse on the other side of the yard. They were oversized, and an amber color, I had never seen before.
      I planned on asking the inlaws where they got those. They looked cool.
      The wind was blowing along the road, until I reached the junction of the two driveways. Then it shifted from the church side of the road.
      Pee! I assumed it was pig pee I was smelling. A scent vial busted to lure the thing over.
      No sooner had I had this thought than the pig comes trotting by me. His head and tail up in search of a lady pig.
      I shifted some gravel and he stopped.
      I scolded him back to the woods.
      He looked back a time or two. It was kinda sad.
      I noted the reflectors again. They were good enough to be visible with only the lights from the church parking lot.
      [All of this was in the space of about 30 minutes.]
      Something felt "off". I was checking behind myself, in case the pig tried to get around me.
      No rabbits, raccoons, cats, opposums...
      ...not in my yard or the neighbor's.
      Highly unusual. Especially since I had seen the cats and raccoons eating from the same dish as the pig. They weren't bothered by tha thing.
      This got my hackles up.
      Everything had gotten dead quiet.
      It occurred to me that fat boy may be on our side of the road.
      A hunt was "on".
      [One more, reply. I promise.]
      * It's the middle of nowhere, and the middle of the night. We have bears, mountain lions and the coyotes to consider, here.

    • @schrodingersgat4344
      @schrodingersgat4344 Před 3 měsíci

      The church across the road was having an event in their detached meeting hall.
      Some fat kid saw the pig and decided he could just, walk over.
      He made it across before being called back and scolded by another church member. As he went, he announced "I'm coming back to get that pig."
      I return home from work to hear about this.
      Screwing with poachers is {and shall forever be} among my favorite activities. I loaded my pockets with fireworks, grabbed a rifle* and went to get between the pig and the church.
      A quick scan with the flashlight only revealed one thing to be "odd".
      You know those "lollipop" reflectors folks put at the ends of their drive?
      I spied a pair, but they were just inside the edge of the woods. Set about halfway between the inlaws place and the old farmhouse on the other side of the yard. They were oversized, and an amber color, I had never seen before.
      I planned on asking the inlaws where they got those. They looked cool.
      The wind was blowing along the road, until I reached the junction of the two driveways. Then it shifted from the church side of the road.
      Pee! I assumed it was pig pee I was smelling. A scent vial busted to lure the thing over.
      No sooner had I had this thought than the pig comes trotting by me. His head and tail up in search of a lady pig.
      I shifted some gravel and he stopped.
      I scolded him back to the woods.
      He looked back a time or two. It was kinda sad.
      I noted the reflectors again. They were good enough to be visible with only the lights from the church parking lot.
      [All of this was in the space of about 30 minutes.]
      Something felt "off". I was checking behind myself, in case the pig tried to get around me.
      No rabbits, raccoons, cats, opposums...
      ...not in my yard or the neighbor's.
      Highly unusual. Especially since I had seen the cats and raccoons eating from the same dish as the pig. They weren't bothered by tha thing.
      This got my hackles up.
      Everything had gotten dead quiet.
      It occurred to me that fat boy may be on our side of the road.
      A hunt was "on".
      [One more, reply. I promise.]
      * It's the middle of nowhere, and the middle of the night. We have bears, mountain lions and the coyotes to consider, here.

    • @schrodingersgat4344
      @schrodingersgat4344 Před 3 měsíci

      This changed things. If he had gotten in behind me, he was (most likely) posted up in the woods and in a superior position.
      I began to move the flashlight across the edge of the woods. Sweeping it slowly, intending to get the point across. On about the fifth sweep, I found the small animals.
      ALL of them were hiding under the old farmhouse. Raccoons, Skunks, stray cats, opposums...ALL staring at the woods.
      I slow my speed with the sweeps. Only thing that stuck out was the reflectors.
      I get back to the small animals and one of the raccoons notices me.
      [I told you it would get weird, here you go.]
      We lock eyes. His go wide and he looks from me to the woods. He does this a few times. Each time adding emphasis with his head. As if to say " HEY, IDIOT! LOOOOK!"
      I sweep again, but meticulously. Stopping at every spot that allows some light into the woods.
      That's when it hit me.
      Those might not be "reflectors".
      I give them a harder look. Each has a diameter akin to the size of my own fist. They are 4 feet off the ground.
      I put my thumb up and out at arms length. They are 50 yds distant. Each is visible on their respective side of my thumb*... then the blinked.
      Whatever they were a part of was too large to be a black bear. We have no grizzlies or polar bears, and an escaped lion or tiger would have had police crawling all over the area. There would have been a helicopter up to ad the cops. There was none of this.
      We stared at each other for a while. It looked to its left. Then back. I swung my rifle in the direction that it was looking. It sat back on its haunches* and
      Rolled its head left and right, as a dog would do. A "puzzled" look.
      It was too big and way too close for me to be sure I could this "whatever" before it got me. Neither of us was going to see the sun, if either of us made a rash move.
      I brought the rifle back to its general direction then lifted it up and layed it against my shoulder. Like a bored guy on guard duty.
      I looked around as if it didn't concern me*. I said, aloud " Nice night. Hope you're having a decent one." and pretended that I wasn't on the verge of urinating and defecating.
      I watched get back on all fours and turn to leave.
      Where do coyotes factor into this?
      After this thing watched me pass up a fat meal, and act as a sort of guardian to same... the coyotes never again came over the hill to take the small animals. They'd make a racket all the way up the creek, to the culvert under the road. Then They'd go quiet until they got well past us.
      I'll spare you my pet theories.
      Suffice it to say that I "made a friend".
      * This meant that (center-to-center) they were 2 ft apart.
      *in doing so, it gained about 8" in height.
      * I was V E R Y, concerned.

  • @SteveandLizDonaldson
    @SteveandLizDonaldson Před 3 měsíci +3103

    American here: if you see a coyote with a giant magnet strapped to it's back, do NOT eat the delicious looking bowl of bird seed set out before you. It's a trap.

    • @rosameryrojas-delcerro1059
      @rosameryrojas-delcerro1059 Před 3 měsíci +118

      And the actual roadrunner (real bird) is an insectivore looking for the maggots at the bottom of the pile.

    • @schrodingersgat4344
      @schrodingersgat4344 Před 3 měsíci +299

      As a representative of the ACME Corporation; I'd like to add that we have sought this coyote for some time.
      His product reviews have damaged our reputation.

    • @markvoelker6620
      @markvoelker6620 Před 3 měsíci +124

      @@schrodingersgat4344Well he is very … Wiley.

    • @Stand_By_For_Mind_Control
      @Stand_By_For_Mind_Control Před 3 měsíci +58

      Nah it's fine to eat the seed it's the coyote who endangers himself. I've seen so many wildlife videos on this and I've yet to see a single fed coyote.

    • @douglasstrother6584
      @douglasstrother6584 Před 3 měsíci +12

      "Coyote" ~ Mark Knopfler

  • @ME-hh9fb
    @ME-hh9fb Před 3 měsíci +892

    My grandparents had a large farm when I was a kid, and one day, found a newborn coyote (ki-yo-tee) puppy in their cornfield. They brought it into their barn, bottle fed it, vaccinated it, and it bonded with one of the farm horses. Everywhere that horse went, the coyote, named Suzy, went too. Slept in the barn with the horse, ate dog food and animals she could catch. VERY sharp teeth, occasionally would kill a chicken, but left the cattle alone. As she got older, she could hear other coyotes yipping at night in the distance, and she would howl back.
    Not a great pet, she was always rather aloof, but preferred to stay in the distance, always watching my grandparents work. She did not care for strangers, when a car would come to the farm, she would usually go to the barn and watch. One day, my grandfather heard her making a lot of noise near the farmhouse, and found her standing between my grandmother and a large gray wolf. Gave my granddad time to get his shotgun.
    She lived for 7 or 8 years, died shortly after her favorite horse died, and was always a very odd, rather spooky creature. My grandparents had over 800 head of cattle, horses, goats, a couple of bison, donkeys, chickens, all sorts of animals, but Suzy was the strangest.

    • @schaddenkorp6977
      @schaddenkorp6977 Před 3 měsíci +35

      She probably got all kinds of crazy during the winter season too no doubt. What state/region was this?

    • @laurawendt8471
      @laurawendt8471 Před 3 měsíci +64

      My grandpa & grandma were WI dairy farmers and they didn’t mind the coyotes as they ate mostly rodents and helped keep the area clear. But if they got close to the house he would shoot close to the ground with his deer shot gun to scare them back. On a whole didn’t have an issue with them except fights with Tom cats. We also had a lot of space for them to roam, fields, pastures, forests. You could watch them move in the dusk across the country road. In urban settings they are pushed into parks and people’s back yards which causes all of the problems for pets.

    • @k-tz5jg
      @k-tz5jg Před 3 měsíci

      They don't get ''pushed'', they can adapt to any environment, and your back yard has the most food in the form of your pets. Tell us you know nothing about coyotes without telling us you know nothing about coyotes @@laurawendt8471 . lol

    • @zedgathegreat9122
      @zedgathegreat9122 Před 3 měsíci +54

      Wow, she stood up to a wolf for your grandmother? That's pretty nuts... That really gave me the shivers. Your grandma very easily could've been dead if it wasn't for Suzy... It's amazing that that creature protected it's "extended pack" to that degree. Coyote's are pretty notorious for not being very brave or daring creatures.
      Thanks for sharing that story, it was pretty cool! Hope you have a great day!

    • @WhacAmole
      @WhacAmole Před 3 měsíci +13

      Thanks for sharing, that's so cool. Feel good story of the day.

  • @From-North-Jersey
    @From-North-Jersey Před 3 měsíci +273

    In this part of the country we have a grocery store chain literally called ACME. My Grandmother had a great sense of humor and one day when I was 10 I accompanied her to ACME and she gave me my own list that started at dairy and worked toward the middle of the store. Grab your own cart and only grab the sizes and brands that match the coupons.
    There were 10 items on the list 7 of which were regular items. The manager tried to not laugh as he informed me they were all out of TNT, Replacement rubber-bands for size XXL Giant Slingshots, and miniature anvils.

    • @MSK.ofAlexandria
      @MSK.ofAlexandria Před 3 měsíci +1

      Maybe I'm slow but I dont understand

    • @mstieler8480
      @mstieler8480 Před 2 měsíci +28

      @@MSK.ofAlexandriaThe things the store "was all out of" are things Wile E. Coyote would order from the fictional ACME in the cartoons in plots to eat the Roadrunner.

    • @yvonnezolna1453
      @yvonnezolna1453 Před měsícem +4

      What a wonderful memory!

    • @murraystewartj
      @murraystewartj Před 12 dny +5

      As a kid I loved those cartoons! I was just learning to read and my parents were quietly amused when I read everything on the screen. I saw ACME and pronounced it "Ace-me" but just let me be. Took me years to figure it out. Fast forward to now. I met my current wife in our later years. Three years ago she took the car out and some crack-head punched a big dent in the rear quarter panel. I said is was an easy fix, should just push out, and forgot about it. One night she got her craft paint out and covered the dent with Wile Coyote splatted over the dent, with cracks radiating from his body. You can tell it's hand done because of the brush strokes. As it was a water based paint she's touched it up several times and the dent is still there. Why? The number of people, old and young, who laugh and say that it brings back memories of those insane cartoons. Love the Grandmother's humour, sounds like something I did to a teen son

    • @duckduckgoismuchbetter
      @duckduckgoismuchbetter Před 7 dny

      Hilarious story! Thanks for telling it. 😂

  • @jeffcauhape6880
    @jeffcauhape6880 Před 29 dny +33

    I am 66 years of age and grew up with the Road Runner and the Coyote. Only recently learned that coyotes are, indeed, fast enough to catch road runners. Another piece of my childhood blown to bits... after falling from a great height ...

    • @margaretstutts4362
      @margaretstutts4362 Před 13 dny

      Yes. Wiley was a mainstay of my childhood too. I’m 57.

    • @brandonhoffman4712
      @brandonhoffman4712 Před 12 dny +1

      Meep meep, 39 here.
      Waves help flag, falls to doom.
      Tomorrow my rockets coming in the mail, along with a new pair of roller skates, leather aviation helmet, and goggles. That bird wont know whats coming!

  • @annunciataparchesi1832
    @annunciataparchesi1832 Před 3 měsíci +284

    Coyote is an important character in Navajo mythology. In stories Coyote is a trickster who also brings wisdom, but with considerably more success than the Warner Brother's Coyote. Coyote is also involved with the creation of the world.

    • @randlebrowne2048
      @randlebrowne2048 Před 3 měsíci +13

      Sounds, to some extent, like the European stories of the fox.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 3 měsíci +19

      ​@@randlebrowne2048 : Yep, though perhaps a touch more dangerous. In some places Raven is similarly a trickster, and in _some_ places the two of them are rivals with each other.

    • @solandri69
      @solandri69 Před 3 měsíci +13

      @@randlebrowne2048 It's a common theme because being smaller and weaker (than a wolf) means they cannot win by strength. So the (anthropomorphic) assumption is that they have to resort to trickery to survive.

    • @francesmeyer8478
      @francesmeyer8478 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Trickster! Very apt!

    • @elultimo102
      @elultimo102 Před 3 měsíci +8

      I read that a roadrunner can only achieve about 20 mph. A coyote can do 40---so he'd win the contest, if he stays away from ACME.

  • @johnmoore8599
    @johnmoore8599 Před 3 měsíci +485

    The best bumper sticker I saw as a kid was, "Eat American lamb, after all 100000 coyotes can't be wrong!"

  • @AlexDun123
    @AlexDun123 Před 2 měsíci +11

    in my experience, the best way to make a coyote want to get as far away from you as possible is to walk towards it shouting "OMG puppy hiii!!! 🤩"

  • @lunarlightbulb158
    @lunarlightbulb158 Před 3 měsíci +41

    Coyotes used to hang out in the open field across the street from my college apartment. I'd see them sometimes when driving to an early class.
    For those across the pond who are curious: coyotes bark and yip like little dogs, but the sound is deeper so you can tell it's being made by a bigger animal.

    • @DMZZ_DZDM
      @DMZZ_DZDM Před 26 dny +3

      They also make a ghostly howl when communicating long distance! It's super cool!

    • @carlacook5181
      @carlacook5181 Před 21 dnem

      To me, the yipping is creepier than the howl.

  • @janefriend2197
    @janefriend2197 Před 3 měsíci +496

    “As a child, and sometimes later as a human………”
    Best line ever. 😂

    • @B30pt87
      @B30pt87 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Agreed!

    • @georgeb.wolffsohn30
      @georgeb.wolffsohn30 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Right 😝🤣😜😂😝🤣😜😂❗

    • @Foolish188
      @Foolish188 Před 2 měsíci +2

      No human would draw all over my best friend's living room wall while we were outside barbecuing. And especially wouldn't sign it.

    • @leekelly9639
      @leekelly9639 Před měsícem +1

      Obviously it’s a joke based on the fact as adults we moan about children completely forgetting we were once children and equally annoying.. 😂🤔👍

    • @brandonhoffman4712
      @brandonhoffman4712 Před 12 dny +1

      Weird, kids are awesome!
      Who else can i train to say "king kong, went to hong kong, playing ping pong, with his ding dong" then entice to start telling it to grandma!
      Its so innocent its evil! I was that kid!

  • @davidrobertson2735
    @davidrobertson2735 Před 3 měsíci +285

    A crazy and very engaged lady in my neighborhood posted a poll on NextDoor saying "Do you want the HOA to do nothing to stop coyotes from eating your pets and possibly your children???" and the poll response was 82% yes.

    • @Cha-Khia
      @Cha-Khia Před 3 měsíci

      Illiteracy rates will kill us all.

    • @benjaminoechsli1941
      @benjaminoechsli1941 Před 3 měsíci +80

      "I don't want the coyotes to win. I want you to lose" vibes.

    • @anthonyugarte1072
      @anthonyugarte1072 Před 3 měsíci +42

      Yeah, I wouldnt want some jackass self appointed rulers of an HoA handling an issue for real government agencies either. Thats fucking dumb.

    • @AnimeSunglasses
      @AnimeSunglasses Před 3 měsíci

      Coyotes: occasionally steal pets in ransack chicken coops
      HOAs: occasionally ban pets, ban chicken coops, ban tree houses, ban grass taller than 3 inches, ban letting you park your car in the driveway, ban....
      Yeah, can we just have the coyotes get rid of the HOA instead?

    • @AnimeSunglasses
      @AnimeSunglasses Před 3 měsíci

      HOAs: voted less trustworthy than coyotes, by a landslide.

  • @Melissa-tw2gp
    @Melissa-tw2gp Před měsícem +16

    British people are sometimes surprised our pet cats often live inside. Coyotes (and the other predators you mention) are a big reason why! Also, way more cars on the road, warm temps that help disease thrive, and hawks who will strike at small animals. The lifespan of an outside cat is significantly lower over here than an inside cat.
    That being said, some cats will never be happy inside so it’s quality over quantity for them.
    If you ever make it down to Southern Illinois, check out the Treehouse Wildlife Center over the border in Missouri. They rehab local wild animals. You can see Coyotes, various birds of prey, raccoons, opossums, snakes and more. It’s a beautiful campus and a great learning experience.

    • @everydaychemistry6231
      @everydaychemistry6231 Před měsícem +2

      I know it's normal in a lot of areas but I think it's incredibly irresponsible to get a pet of any sort only to leave it to roam outside, as a pet owner you are responsible for that animal's safety. Not only that but that's how feral populations start

    • @hallaloth3112
      @hallaloth3112 Před 19 dny +2

      @@everydaychemistry6231 Not only that but you're responsible for any trouble that animal may cause too. In generally we don't let dogs roam because they can be a danger to people, and cause all manner of trouble. . . just because they are smaller doesn't mean cats don't cause their own sort of trouble. On top of generally turning people's yards into litterboxes, tearing up gardens, and leaving small corpses strewn everywhere. ..there's also the chance of them getting INTO other people's homes/properties and causes injury to a person or that person's pet. I know a lot of indoor cats can get incredibly upset if a roaming cat harasses them through a window for example. . .and stress like that can lead to a host of problems.

  • @mfhberg
    @mfhberg Před 3 měsíci +41

    Had a half blue heeler, half coyote mix for a pet. Even the 6' fences never even slowed it a bit after it grew up.

    • @scarlettcerutti7930
      @scarlettcerutti7930 Před 9 dny +2

      A coyote jumped our 6ft fence right into our backyard to snag our dog :( thankfully we scared it away before too much damage was done to our poor guy. He wasn’t bitten too badly.

    • @JD-tn5lz
      @JD-tn5lz Před 2 dny

      Yes, but if it was pure heeler it would have just opened a gate instead.

  • @QuestionMan
    @QuestionMan Před 3 měsíci +219

    I am quite fond of their naughty propensity for dropping anvils, painting tunnel themed murals on mountainsides, and collecting exclamatory signage.

    • @theresap3467
      @theresap3467 Před 3 měsíci +8

      " painting tunnel themed murals on mountainsides" 🤣🤣🤣

    • @michaelabraham9177
      @michaelabraham9177 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Sigh!!! Another gen x'er remembering the good ole days and Saturday morning hovering over the heat grate in the trailer park with a blanket in our underwear while watching cartoons lol.

    • @lindahaas385
      @lindahaas385 Před 3 měsíci

      😂😆😂😆😂😆😂

    • @katavenger
      @katavenger Před dnem

      Just don't let that coyote know that in real life coyotes can outrun roadrunners.

  • @markvoelker6620
    @markvoelker6620 Před 3 měsíci +342

    They prefer Acme products almost exclusively.

    • @Daphne-tm5lg
      @Daphne-tm5lg Před 3 měsíci +8

      Haha

    • @martinricardo4503
      @martinricardo4503 Před 3 měsíci +31

      Anvils are prized.

    • @nellgwenn
      @nellgwenn Před 3 měsíci +23

      Such rare brand loyalty. Especially with Acme's wings that make them able to fly.
      I guess it's Acme's ability to deliver in extreme remote locations.

    • @Mike-xi4zt
      @Mike-xi4zt Před 3 měsíci +21

      Meep Meep🐦🔥

    • @merylbonderow5993
      @merylbonderow5993 Před 3 měsíci +8

      Team Ajax.

  • @LizzyCat
    @LizzyCat Před 3 měsíci +54

    When I was in elementary school in Southern California a pack of coyotes had torn up someone’s cat all over the P.E. field. It was pretty horrific and the teachers kept us jogging around the field. 😂 They said, “It’s just the circle of life. Don’t touch anything.” 😅

    • @Lemon-Bark
      @Lemon-Bark Před 3 měsíci +1

      Oh my 😅
      Did the science teachers have anything to say or was it class as usual?

    • @LizzyCat
      @LizzyCat Před 3 měsíci +7

      @@Lemon-Bark class as usual. I’m not sure what it’s like elsewhere, but in the science classes I took the students dissected worms, frogs, owl pellets, and squid. So I’m sure it was chatted about, but dissecting a cat was upper level classes. Definitely not for elementary classes. (And if this isn’t normal anymore- it was the 90s).

    • @Lemon-Bark
      @Lemon-Bark Před 3 měsíci +1

      @LizzyCat Ah I was hoping they'd at least get a lesson out of all that trauma! I think I did miss the part about it being elementary school, dissections were more towards middle and highschool for my area

    • @Scaryandtroublesome
      @Scaryandtroublesome Před 2 měsíci +4

      Yup! That’s exactly what it is. 😂 If folks don’t want their cats to be predated on, they should keep them indoors!

    • @hallaloth3112
      @hallaloth3112 Před 19 dny +1

      @@Scaryandtroublesome While this is absolutely true. . .not sure we need to subject elementary children to that level of gore. That would scar me NOW as an adult, I would have been hysterical as a child.

  • @justanothergunnerd8128
    @justanothergunnerd8128 Před 3 měsíci +57

    Coyotes trapped my cat in a window well. I went outside with a rifle to scare them off but they ran like hell as soon as the door opened slightly and made a small noise. I've seen very few things run that fast and be that scared of a human. It's surprising how fearful of humans they can be.

    • @thejustlawofshamash
      @thejustlawofshamash Před 3 měsíci +13

      I've had to run coyotes out of my campsite before, and usually they're a quarter mile away by the time I even get out of my tent. These days I don't even bother getting up, I just yell at them from inside the tent. A hearty "oh FUCK off!" does the trick.

    • @missano3856
      @missano3856 Před 2 měsíci +13

      They are scared shitless of people, especially in places that people shoot them.

    • @TheGrinningViking
      @TheGrinningViking Před měsícem +5

      They're a problem in California because of the gun laws, take your dog right off the leash if they get a chance.
      I wish we could just have sensible gun laws instead of "all guns are bad and the same" and "a breach loading rifle and a semi auto with a 50 bullet quick swap magazine are the same thing and neither should be restricted" but it is as it is.

    • @jeffcauhape6880
      @jeffcauhape6880 Před 29 dny

      Coyotes are smart enough to recognize a bigger predator.

    • @caffeinette
      @caffeinette Před 10 dny +1

      The problems start when they're *not* fearful of humans. Keep 'em on their toe beans!

  • @francesmeyer8478
    @francesmeyer8478 Před 3 měsíci +290

    In Central Illinois we used a donkey to keep coyotes away from our cattle. Another farmer had one with his sheep.Donkeys are very territorial and protective.We stopped losing calves. Worked like a charm!

    • @gl15col
      @gl15col Před 3 měsíci +21

      I've heard llamas work too.

    • @Hollylivengood
      @Hollylivengood Před 3 měsíci +10

      My dad's parents did that!

    • @KNETTWERX
      @KNETTWERX Před 3 měsíci +19

      A close friend I grew up with in Central NY is a horse farmer and trainer. She has a couple of donkeys to keep wolves away. For those a bit squeamish, I do not recommend looking up videos or pictures of donkey/coyote interactions.

    • @davidkanengieter
      @davidkanengieter Před 3 měsíci +12

      My brothers in law have donkeys in with their sheep. Amazing critter control.

    • @LemonbreadSC
      @LemonbreadSC Před 3 měsíci +26

      I've seen a single donkey drive off 4 coyotes and 2 stray dogs who were all teamed up. I say seen, but it was more like heard...it was the loudest cacophony I ever heard around here. Donkeys don't mess around.

  • @lynnbowers4722
    @lynnbowers4722 Před 3 měsíci +419

    In San Diego, an outdoor cat is just a coyote meal waiting to happen. Coyotes live in all our urban and suburban canyons.

    • @womanishthing1994
      @womanishthing1994 Před 3 měsíci +18

      Yep. They gotta eat 😂

    • @ValleyOakPaper
      @ValleyOakPaper Před 3 měsíci +68

      I saw a study from LA that found that 20% of coyote scat contained traces of house cat. One more reason to keep cats indoor-only.

    • @wolffriendinus
      @wolffriendinus Před 3 měsíci +13

      Same in Washington

    • @Steampunkkids
      @Steampunkkids Před 3 měsíci +21

      I’m from the Los Angeles area. We pronounce it coy-OH-tea here. My kids and I have been watching a family of coyotes grow from birth through young adult (that is how old they are now). My “ring” doorbell type camera picks up their activity outside of my front door. They are so cute and floofy!

    • @suzz1776
      @suzz1776 Před 3 měsíci +7

      Crazy thing is that I haven't really heard or seen them lately, since the homeless moved into the canyons and SD river area. I wonder if they got scared off???

  • @benny_lemon5123
    @benny_lemon5123 Před měsícem +3

    I knew a girl who was attacked by a coyote. The circumstances were super specific, so its absolutely not a common thing, even if its tecnically possible to occur.
    Basically, her family lived in a small town on a mountain range. Their back yard wasnt completely fenced, and opened out onto a hillside at the outer edge of town. They had a dog that was fed exclusively in the unfenced yard where he was kept on a line. One day, the girl was playing by herself in the yard (family dog was inside) when the coyote grabbed her by the head and dragged her out of the yard.
    She was rescued and survived with many stitches to the scalp, but was otherwise ok. Wildlife officers investigated and found that because the family dog was tethered and the fence incomplete, the coyote would enter the yard to steal the dog food, and on the fateful day the girl just happened to go outside when the coyote was already nosing around, looking for food. Its the only case ive ever heard of like it, and ive lived in coyote country my whole life.

  • @cousinwil5808
    @cousinwil5808 Před 3 měsíci +62

    We had a coyote pack that lived in my neighborhood in a busy touristy part San Francisco. I met them a few times, usually the night before garbage pickup. They’re beautiful and skittish creatures, as you noted. You’d see mom make her way down the street, look around, make a noise and then her cubs would follow a minute later. Was always fascinated by them.

    • @schaddenkorp6977
      @schaddenkorp6977 Před 3 měsíci +8

      Most canine/canids are shy/cautious by nature. It doesn’t mean they remain this way all the time and usually they’re trying to figure out what it is they might be dealing with before deciding to do anything other than maintain distance. They see us with our two sets of forward facing eyes, they realize that this means we could be a predator species and would prefer to stay off its menu. When all we want is to give chin scratches and head pats.

    • @hockeygrrlmuse
      @hockeygrrlmuse Před 3 měsíci +3

      I used to work at the Haight Whole Foods. When they closed the McDonalds across the street, one of the Buena Vista Park coyotes came down to feast on the rats (who were having a feast of their own). Largest canine I've ever seen. I was in complete awe. Glad I stayed so late at the store that day.

    • @bl8388
      @bl8388 Před 6 dny

      They love eating cats. They love eating squirrels. They love eating puppies. They love bunnies. They love leftover hot dogs in the trash can. They love lotta food.

  • @jeanieschrag5378
    @jeanieschrag5378 Před 3 měsíci +371

    I lived in Florida and saw a german sheppard trying to get a cat that was taking refuge on our car. I yelled and started chasing it... it ran but turned around and growled at me. I was shocked when I saw it was a coyote!!😮

    • @thoughtfuldevil6069
      @thoughtfuldevil6069 Před 3 měsíci +38

      I'm glad the cat was alright :'(

    • @Og-Judy
      @Og-Judy Před 3 měsíci +12

      ​@@thoughtfuldevil6069 Interesting. I thought they look more wolf than ever a German Shepard

    • @celesteredding1550
      @celesteredding1550 Před 3 měsíci +9

      ​@Og-Judy 👍🏾they do but many ppl don't take time to know the physical difference

    • @markloveless1001
      @markloveless1001 Před 3 měsíci +26

      @@Og-Judy Wolves are hella bigger - skinny dude vs Schwartzenegger. German Shepard with ribs showing, more like.

    • @prestonestes1388
      @prestonestes1388 Před 3 měsíci +32

      It could also be a coydog.

  • @tthappyrock368
    @tthappyrock368 Před 3 měsíci +462

    In the tradition of "keep Portland weird," a young coyote boarded one of our light rail trains, curled up in one of the seats, and rode to the end of the line where it was escorted off. That's Portland, Oregon, where we have a deluge of rain nine months of the year and drought the other three.

    • @ANPC-pi9vu
      @ANPC-pi9vu Před 3 měsíci +78

      What a well behaved passenger, more so than a lot of the humans in Portland these days. lol

    • @TheFuriousScribbles
      @TheFuriousScribbles Před 3 měsíci +32

      For some reason, I thought that it left the train on its own. I could be misremembering though. I do recall two facts though-- It was the Red Line, and the Sleater-Kinney song Lightrail Coyote was a reference to the event.

    • @FYMASMD
      @FYMASMD Před 3 měsíci +8

      Portland is being ruined by people like you moving here. It rains more in NYC.

    • @racheljensen1823
      @racheljensen1823 Před 3 měsíci +16

      That's awesome
      The coyote part - not the drought part
      Greetings from Tacoma :)

    • @geargeekpdx3566
      @geargeekpdx3566 Před 3 měsíci

      @@FYMASMD POrtland is not being ruined by anyone. There are just as many homeless here as in any red state city with the same population. Stop being a shill for lying fascists.

  • @SisterCasendra
    @SisterCasendra Před 3 měsíci +11

    We used to have a lab-chow mix, 50-60 lbs of pure muscle covered in thick black fur. I caught a coyote contemplating her one time in the backyard, thinking about taking his chances. And there's our dog staring right back, slowly wagging her tail at it like she might make a new friend. Fortunately the coyote thought better of starting anything and ran off, because our girl outweighed him by a good margin and could hold her own. But I remember my dad going around to warn the neighbors with smaller pets or little kids - if the coyote was desperate enough to size up our dog, he might be sick.

    • @eshea3621
      @eshea3621 Před 7 dny

      I disagree re the danger from coyote. As they get comfortable in urban environments then tend to get bolder. Friend visiting sister in L.A. walking her German Shepherd in the driveway found a coyote watching them & contemplating action.
      Also the bigger Eastern Coyote is actually a mix of Wolf and coyote and came to us from Canada and has slowly worked its way south for the last 40 years. Now in Central Park.

  • @KonglomeratYT
    @KonglomeratYT Před 3 měsíci +7

    Me and my friend once stumbled into a group of 1 to 2 dozen coyotes. It was bizzare. it was at 3AM at an abandoned mine in a forest. We picked up rocks for weapons and had to find our way out in near complete darkness. Their loud yapping following us was surreal. I wrote the entire night down as a short story when I got home.

    • @scarlettcerutti7930
      @scarlettcerutti7930 Před 9 dny

      The yapping sounds of a pack is so eerie. Happens in our neighborhood from time to time when one catches dinner and lets the whole gang know. The sounds will bounce off the hill and literally wake me out of deep sleep.
      If it happens when I’m awake, it’s like turning a coyote volume knob from 1 to 100 in 30 seconds. So freaky… I can’t even imagine how scary it would be to have them be yelping AT ME! Ahhhhh

  • @Khvalheim10
    @Khvalheim10 Před 3 měsíci +141

    Coyote calls are eerie as hell. Especially in the dark, early hours of the morning.

    • @steggopotamus
      @steggopotamus Před 3 měsíci +3

      And camping... Lordy it's so much worse then.

    • @Nexalian_Gamer
      @Nexalian_Gamer Před 3 měsíci +1

      I live on the edge of town and I hear them almost every night. Shit is creepy as hell, especially when it's close

    • @k-tz5jg
      @k-tz5jg Před 3 měsíci

      That's because they are evil creatures from the supernatural world.

    • @danbellows9529
      @danbellows9529 Před 3 měsíci

      I'm a light sleeper. There are a bunch out in the field and the damn things wake me up ALL. The. Time. Grew up around them, so not so eerie...just annoying.

    • @Khvalheim10
      @Khvalheim10 Před 3 měsíci

      @lows9529 I grew up in an area rife with them, too, son. Shit's still creepy when it comes out of nowhere in the middle of the night/early morning.

  • @popuptarget7386
    @popuptarget7386 Před 3 měsíci +128

    I always enjoyed the story of the young lady who was driving across the desert. She spotted a "dog" on the side of the road and stopped to put it on her car. She gave it water and food then took a photo of course which she shared on social media, only to be told that the confused looking critter was a coyote.

  • @Roland1212
    @Roland1212 Před 3 měsíci +10

    0:34 They also try to make off with toddlers/small children too.
    Where my family used to live people had to watch over the preschoolers. Coyotes were sometimes spotted near by watching.

    • @laurie7689
      @laurie7689 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Yeah, I read about some young children being attacked by coyotes at a playground in a Texas park. Ambulances were called for a couple of the attacks. In at least one attack, a father had to rescue his 4 year old girl from being drug off into the woods by a coyote.

  • @stephenelberfeld8175
    @stephenelberfeld8175 Před měsícem +3

    In the east, the "eastern coyote" is actually a coy-wolf that hybridized in Quebec before spreading south to New England.

  • @JohnSmith-gb5vg
    @JohnSmith-gb5vg Před 3 měsíci +58

    All coyotes have an ACME TNT carrier license. I think it’s issued after the first road runner encounter. 😊

  • @deanfirnatine7814
    @deanfirnatine7814 Před 3 měsíci +109

    Here on YT Timmy MC has a "pet" wild coyote named Weave that hangs out with his dog and cat and wild racoon that shows up for handouts. Weave showed up on his deck as a young pup starving and eating his cherry tomatoes right after his old dog died and he missed him so ended up taking care of Weave, a couple of years later Weave eats dog food and hot dogs, plays with his new dog and gets viciously ambushed by his new cat. Weave generally hangs out on the deck but does come inside especially when the wild coyote pack howls and scares her.

    • @herbwitch5681
      @herbwitch5681 Před 3 měsíci +22

      Yahrr! I wondered if I would see Weave’s name come up! 😂

    • @w.reidripley1968
      @w.reidripley1968 Před 3 měsíci +17

      Seen the cat business on Tube:
      a) Weave _loves_ bouncing on the rumpus-room sofa.
      b) like many of the small to medium wild canines, Weave is hyper like a fennec.
      c) The cat loves to wrestle with Weave, and Weave vice versa --- they are absolutely having a blast!

    • @thisistherevolt
      @thisistherevolt Před 3 měsíci +25

      Timmy MC is a Disney Princess. Also, when his dog Duck got stolen so many people recognized him the people that stole him were yelled at and shamed by their church and family. Yarrrrrrrrrr

    • @RoseNZieg
      @RoseNZieg Před 3 měsíci +7

      I didn't hear that his dog was found.

    • @thisistherevolt
      @thisistherevolt Před 3 měsíci +12

      ​@@RoseNZieg Yeah Duck has been back for a couple months now.

  • @skepticalmonkey7263
    @skepticalmonkey7263 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I live in Texas near a big park. I see coyotes multiple times a month. I hear them frequently at night especially in the spring (maybe they mate then?). They are very smart. One trick that they are known for is having a single coyote bait a dog into chasing it only for that coyote to lead the dog back to its pack. Coyotes have been interbreeding with wolves and some larger domesticated dogs. I saw some stat about most of the eastern coyotes having at least some wolf blood (which apparently makes them larger and more aggressive). In 2022, a coyote mauled a 2 year-old human on a porch in Dallas - the child survived.

  • @paulableman2663
    @paulableman2663 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I live across the street from a large feed corn field surrounded by hundreds of acres of forest. Large herds of whitetail deer and coyote packs are common sights. While the coyotes themselves aren't necessarily aggressive towards humans, the increasingly common coyote-dog hybrids are. They're the size of a large German shepherd, and are vicious. The residents of my street have come together multiple times to eradicate them when discovered.

  • @josiasherrera8664
    @josiasherrera8664 Před 3 měsíci +110

    Interesting about the origins of the word Coyote is that it is of Native origin. Coming from the Nahuatl word Coyotl. Coyotl became Coyote through Mexican Spanish. The original English/American common name was prairie wolf or brush wolf. Once the Americans came into contact with Mexican ranchers they adopted Coyote.

    • @vailpcs4040
      @vailpcs4040 Před 3 měsíci +7

      I've heard Koy-yoh-tay pronunciation from Apache, Navajo and Pascua Yaqui people I've worked with but I have no idea if that was for my benefit or not.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před 3 měsíci +8

      In New Mexico, many older houses have Coyote Fences, which usually surround the back yard and are built out of rows of pine tree trunks lashed together, all between 9-10 feet tall that are sharpened to a fine point at the top.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 3 měsíci +3

      ​@@vailpcs4040 : Probably for their own benefit as much as yours. The Apache (I think there's at least 3?) and Comanche languages aren't particularly related if I understand correctly (apparently Apache is related to Aztec, and Comanche to Shoshone, so that's a pretty wide geographical divide), so using English with each other will usually be easier than learning each other's languages.

    • @naughtiusmaximus1811
      @naughtiusmaximus1811 Před 3 měsíci

      Beagles '24!!!🐶🇺🇸

  • @michaelcogley3150
    @michaelcogley3150 Před 3 měsíci +195

    I'm in South Dakota. I've had countless encounters with coyotes. They're extremely cautious of people. Many times I've been in the backcountry in the Black Hills or fishing on the Missouri River reservoirs and come evening it's a neat experience to have coyotes seemingly in all directions and very close start to sing. It amazes me how they can be so close making a racket and I can't see them. It never gets old.

    • @morebirdsandroses
      @morebirdsandroses Před 3 měsíci +11

      I briefly lived in the desert near Salton Sea before it was quite wrecked. At night the coyotes sang; it was the call and response from different directions that was unsettling but you're right about it being pleasurable to hear otherwise. 😂

    • @goma3088
      @goma3088 Před 3 měsíci +3

      I live in suburban Colorado near a small park and some relatively open space where I see the occasional coyote and, less often, foxes. I probably hear the foxes more that I hear the coyotes but I know I have heard both. At night they are sometimes so loud that I still hear them through my sound cancelling headphone while listening to something else.

    • @MonkeyJedi99
      @MonkeyJedi99 Před 3 měsíci +6

      Here in New England, we see packs with "coy-dogs" the offspring of stray/feral dogs and the coyote packs that adopt them.
      I've been told that the coy-dogs are more people-aggressive.

    • @derpyeh9107
      @derpyeh9107 Před 3 měsíci +10

      They're not bothered by people in the slightest in suburban Colorado. They just look at you like "get tf off my prairie, you pest."

    • @kenhoyer8601
      @kenhoyer8601 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Not so afraid of people in the city.

  • @Reyairia
    @Reyairia Před 3 měsíci +2

    One thing to keep in mind is that East coast coyotes are actually wolf hybrids, so they're a lot bigger and more social, making them more dangerous

  • @TheresaPowers
    @TheresaPowers Před 3 měsíci +93

    Some ranchers use llamas to protect their sheep from coyotes.

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Před 3 měsíci

      Apparently donkeys are even better.

    • @JuggoJuggo
      @JuggoJuggo Před 3 měsíci +22

      Most use donkeys or dogs.

    • @SonoraSlinger
      @SonoraSlinger Před 3 měsíci +21

      Here in Arizona many ranchers keep donkeys for coyote defense. Donkeys hate dogs and will flatten an entire pack if they can.

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@SonoraSlinger
      Can a few donkeys handle wolves? Just curious.

    • @JuggoJuggo
      @JuggoJuggo Před 3 měsíci +6

      @@SonoraSlinger They are just about as funny, playful and affectionate as any pet if you want to socialize them.

  • @MSinistrari
    @MSinistrari Před 3 měsíci +52

    We still laugh over when I first moved from Chicago to New Mexico and met my first wild coyote. We were having a particularly bad drought at the time and the news was warning that coyotes were coming down from the mountain into the city. I was walking some pizza boxes out to the dumpster and saw what I still swear to this day, looked like a really skinny dog. I baby talked to it and threw it some pizza crusts while it stood there looking around like it was expecting a hidden camera stunt. I threw out the boxes and on my way back to my apartment, my neighbor informed me that 'we don't feed coyotes'. I couldn't believe it was a coyote, but it was. I kept expecting over the next few days to have a pack of coyotes show up wearing signs stating 'Not a coyote, Am a skinny dog, feed me'.

    • @cogforreal5952
      @cogforreal5952 Před 3 měsíci +3

      There’s coyotes in Chicago but they are used to urban life

    • @barbie3sunset
      @barbie3sunset Před 3 měsíci +1

      😂🤣😂🤣 That coyote was wondering what you were doing.

    • @cycleboy8028
      @cycleboy8028 Před 3 měsíci

      LOL city folk. Yeah, rule #1 with wildlife, if you feed them, they will come. And next is knocking over your garbage cans cuz you proved to them that you put eats in there.

  • @lochnessmonster5149
    @lochnessmonster5149 Před měsícem +2

    Temecula,California has coyotes the size of whitetail deer.

  • @homeinthewhiteoaks
    @homeinthewhiteoaks Před 8 hodinami

    Fellow Hoosier, our Coyote's at least in the rural areas are hunted hard. So they are scared to death of us. I have actually bumped into one on my farm. It was occupied trying to dig under a building to get at a grounhog down a hole and I came around the corner and bumped into it with its head down the hole. It's reaction was to pull its head out see me and run. It let out a couple soft yelps as to ran like it was being hit with a switch. I assume it made that sound as a sign of submission.
    When I was a kid I would walk the strip mine roads behind my grandmothers house hunting rabbits that were thick in the area, the Coyotes were there in large numbers also. It was strange how use to humans they were, due to mine workers. As I walked the roads they were also on the roads in front and behind me. They would slip off into the tall grasses as I got within about 50 yards and then pop back out in the road when I past, again about 50 yards behind me. I have never felt threatened by coyotes.

  • @brkaz5864
    @brkaz5864 Před 3 měsíci +39

    Arizona native. We live in coyote territory and they are part of our culture. They appear, real and artistically, everywhere. We love them and embrace them metaphorically. Sitting on the porch listening to their howling is a lullaby to our ears. We take our daily walks in their company. We grow up knowing how to live with them and they allow us to exist around them. The only problems that arise are with individuals that move into our cities and do not know how to live or interact with them. We love our coyotes and above all else respect them.

    • @lcvb1624
      @lcvb1624 Před 3 měsíci

      😂 Only God can fix brain damage.😉👍

    • @aaronbosen6743
      @aaronbosen6743 Před 28 dny

      So you're going on public record you've never seen one or visited Arizona. Arizona literally has a paid bounty program to wipe them out kid.

  • @kevinbyrne4538
    @kevinbyrne4538 Před 3 měsíci +162

    In August 2022 I was sitting in the back yard of an acquaintance who resides in central Massachusetts. We were chatting when a coyote strolled through the yard. He was about 20 feet from us and he was a big healthy fellow. What really impressed me was that he didn't even deign to turn his head and acknowledge our existence. He was so accustomed to humans -- and regarded them as such a trivial threat -- that he ignored us completely. For our sake I would prefer that coyotes demonstrate at least a little shyness around us humans.

    • @kathywiseley4382
      @kathywiseley4382 Před 3 měsíci +31

      I live in Central Illinois. A few years ago, I was out at night with my husky when I saw a pair of eyes glowing in the distance. So I went back in the house and got a flashlight. Shined it that direction and sure enough, there was a coyote. The thing was - with the size of my husky - and me being out there - neither one of us actually scared him off. He just stood there and watched us for a while. Then he trotted on down the line in the direction he had been heading to begin with. They are getting just a little too comfortable with us.

    • @craigsurette3438
      @craigsurette3438 Před 3 měsíci +18

      That lack of fear of humans probably means you met a Coy-dog. When they interbreed with dogs, the get bigger, and they often loose their fear of humans, making a very bad combination.

    • @rachel4483
      @rachel4483 Před 3 měsíci +9

      I hear you. While living in north central mass around that time one came after my children in our yard in broad daylight. Mass coy-wolves/coydogs are BAD.

    • @seanlanglois8620
      @seanlanglois8620 Před 3 měsíci +6

      I'm in Massachusetts a few miles from Boston and I saw a Wolf it could have been a coyote but this thing was larger then my buddies St Bernard

    • @userequaltoNull
      @userequaltoNull Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@seanlanglois8620 Almost certainly not a wolf, its much too built up over there. Although, there are black bears living on reservoir land west of Worcester, so who knows?

  • @lindae9875
    @lindae9875 Před 2 dny

    i live in central IL, USA and have seen plenty of wildlife, including coyotes. They used to rush seniors walking their tiny apartment-sized dogs outside of their retirement village. And yes, more than once the dog was seized and taken on the adventure of a lifetime by the coyote. A bobcat was also spotted about 20 miles away, I got a picture of it from my friend who did the spotting.

  • @slc1161
    @slc1161 Před měsícem +1

    The one time I remember my therapy dog Maggie, a blu heeler, outside on her lead so she could go potty before coming in for bed. She normally was off leash but would chase skunks at night so I had to leash her. I heard the strangest growl noise come out of her. I ran to the door and saw her posturing and making noise because a coyote was walking right down the middle of the street. She was protecting the home.

  • @tsbrownie
    @tsbrownie Před 3 měsíci +34

    I can verify that coyotes do not make good household pets. My sister/BIL adopted a "puppy" from a shelter. It was OK until it hit maturity, then it was totally uncontrollable/trainable. She (coyote) had a strong nesting instinct and turned stuffed furniture into nests. She ate a whole chicken my sister left to cool, including most of the bones. She ate a whole loaf of bread, which they did not figure out until the plastic bag/closure tab was excreted from the tail end of the "dog." My sister refused to believe it was a coyote, until I read from her encyclopedias (yes, this was a while ago) the description of a coyote, which word by word exactly fit her "dog." They gave her back to the shelter.

    • @Mokiefraggle
      @Mokiefraggle Před 3 měsíci +6

      Yeah, coyotes are definitely not good pets. I worked as a volunteer at a wildlife rescue/rehab clinic, and we had a coyote who was a non-releasable as a result of a human taking her as a pup in hopes of making her into a pet. When she started showing her wild instincts, particularly getting super aggressive when she came into heat and generally being uncontrollable, the people who "owned" her chained her in the back yard. She had all the instincts but none of the socialization or skills needed to survive in the wild, hence why she was part of our non-releasable collection, so you had to be _incredibly_ careful and observant of her behavior if you were going into her enclosure. You never knew if she was going to suddenly go from shy and stand-offish to aggressive, especially when she was in heat. The only person who could really go around her casually then was our clinic director, because she associated him as something like her pack leader, though that had its own inherent problems as well.

  • @D35p3r4d0
    @D35p3r4d0 Před 3 měsíci +126

    I grew up in Northern California. We had Coyotes, Cougars (The Cat and the Woman), Wild Turkeys, and Rattlesnakes (Rattlers, we generally called them in my household). Although they did avoid humans in my area, local stray cats were definitely on the menu. I still recall the Cat Massacre of '03 when we woke up to find our yard had been the scene of a brutal battle between the twenty-or-so strays of the area and a pack of Coyotes whom usually hunted across the tracks. The Coyotes won.

    • @nneichan9353
      @nneichan9353 Před 3 měsíci +22

      the turkeys are darn scary if they get worked up, and LARGE, too.

    • @littlebitofhope1489
      @littlebitofhope1489 Před 3 měsíci +13

      So Cal here. We lived in an area with all that, except replace the Turkeys with Bobcats.

    • @80sGamerLady
      @80sGamerLady Před 3 měsíci +19

      Yeah I live in Florida and I don't understand how people let their small dogs outside without leashes just to let them wander or their cats be outdoor cats. So stupid. Their lives are shortened so significantly compared to them being indoor pets.

    • @80sGamerLady
      @80sGamerLady Před 3 měsíci +8

      Or just being a round their small dogs while they use the restroom and not let them wander the front yard.

    • @westzed23
      @westzed23 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Great scene to wake up to. Famous Battle of No Cal!

  • @Mehwhatevr
    @Mehwhatevr Před měsícem +2

    I like this channel. Finally a British comedian laughing with us instead of at us. :D

  • @ladywisewolf3942
    @ladywisewolf3942 Před 3 měsíci +12

    Southern Californian here and I've lived around coyotes all my life and just love them. I live now at the base of the San Bernardino mountains and there are so many coyotes here that the near by college has them for a mascot and there are several streets that bare their name. I love hearing there yapping and howling echoing in the nearby canyon at night. There is a generational pack that lives in my neighborhood and I love seeing them silently glide by a few yards from me late at night sometimes when I'm taking out the trash, and always the alpha male will stop for a few seconds to acknowledge me before catching up to his pack. I always feel so privileged when this happeneds. By the way coyote's main source of food are rodents, so they provide a valuable service in keeping them under control. 😉

  • @dakotatodd5168
    @dakotatodd5168 Před 3 měsíci +243

    As an American who grew up in Massachusetts I can actually say that coyotes have become more abundant in residential areas in recent years than from when I was a kid they have always been there just not as frequently as we do now

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Před 3 měsíci +10

      We had 57 on the island 20 yrs ago. Now it's.up to 100

    • @dakotatodd5168
      @dakotatodd5168 Před 3 měsíci +20

      Exactly my point they have always been there but they have become more abundant in recent years in the case of my hometown in Massachusetts over development of wooded land is taking away there habitat forcing them onto the streets of town

    • @TanyaQueen182
      @TanyaQueen182 Před 3 měsíci +12

      Grew up in Woburn, MA. We had a coyote run through our backyard while we had about 15 people there for a BBQ. Was crazy.

    • @wren7195
      @wren7195 Před 3 měsíci +7

      I live in Southeastern Ohio. When I was a little girl, EVERY bus ride to school we'd see several bunnies, groundhogs out doing their things. Many possum and often raccoon and skunk roadkills. Saw my first live coyote in daytime in 99, and then only saw two over fifteen years, now the last two years I've seen seven roadkill coyotes.
      What I've noticed most though (live in Ohio, was raised in the mountains of east Tennessee by my fur trapper grandpa... no I kinda wish it was a joke, but I learned) is that now, there are no rabbits, I've seen one groundhog in six years, only two possum roadkills in five years (they'll take to the trees but they're scavengers, so when looking for food on the ground they're very vulnerable and NOT FAST...), mostly the roadkills now are skunk and young raccoons.
      Our groundbirds like kildere and pipers are mostly gone too, but I'm sure they've just moved for obvious reasons. Foxes and hawks will track and hunt voles, field mice, rats, all prey coyotes typically rely on also. What we're seeing now are actual "packs" of possible coy-wolves, or at least adaptive behavior, because there's more of them and they're going (successfully) after larger prey. Not that a coyote couldn't kill any of the above animals easily... but that without a partner, that kill isn't guaranteed.
      Working together for such prey also obviously requires more of it, too.
      Be safe guys, keep your little critters in doors. Our DNR here is *FINALLY* recommending folk keep an eye on their smaller pets and even children, *sighs putting away her frying pan she's been hitting for six years* damn arthritis.

    • @Svensk7119
      @Svensk7119 Před 3 měsíci +3

      The coyote never crossed the Mississippi. Until we built bridges, and all but destroyed the American gray wolf.

  • @marlenafreeman2745
    @marlenafreeman2745 Před 3 měsíci +34

    Georgia here. We call them " ky-odies".. as a teenager I would walk my 100lb rottweiler at night with nothing to worry about.. until the night on a desolate dirt road my dog ran behind me and whimpered. I was frozen with fear! I stood very still and quiet,wondering what would upset my huge friend, until I saw the mother coyote and her 2 pups cross the path in front of us... Somehow he knew not to get involved.

  • @Where_is_Waldo
    @Where_is_Waldo Před 3 měsíci +2

    The bald eagle also ranges into Southern Alberta. Also, while the wolf is a predator of the coyote, it also sometimes hybridizes with coyotes. They can also hybridize with domestic dogs, someone I worked with knows a farmer who's retriever was bred by a coyote.

  • @philiprowney
    @philiprowney Před měsícem +2

    8:32 - The Dog was looking very alarmed as if it had heard you.. 🤣

  • @venturefanatic9262
    @venturefanatic9262 Před 3 měsíci +163

    Coyotes are very very opportunistic. They will take anything they think they can. Wolves are for more manageable.

    • @westzed23
      @westzed23 Před 3 měsíci +20

      Yes, coyotes can adapt well to living in cities.

    • @kbm2055
      @kbm2055 Před 3 měsíci +12

      Yes wolves live in packs and generally require a large amount of prey. Coyotes are individualistic and can adjust to about any situation.

    • @christineperez7562
      @christineperez7562 Před 3 měsíci +1

      If you are looking at them they will not.

    • @christineperez7562
      @christineperez7562 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Put food out and they won't bother you or your animals. They run away from bobcats

    • @dogf421
      @dogf421 Před 3 měsíci +3

      wolves are much less annoying, you dont wanna be caught in the wrong place at the wrong time by a wolf pack because they will actually try to kill you and can succeed but most of the time they are pretty chill from what i know

  • @oldnumber5866
    @oldnumber5866 Před 3 měsíci +20

    I remember as a kid there was a bounty on coyotes. In the evenings you could hear them howling. It was an unwritten rule that if you saw one and you had a gun, you were required to shoot it.

    • @Razor-gx2dq
      @Razor-gx2dq Před 3 měsíci

      Some people still do that especially out in the sticks

    • @SadisticSenpai61
      @SadisticSenpai61 Před 3 měsíci +3

      I think studies have shown that hunting them actually leads to them breeding more than they would otherwise.
      Ofc where I live, they're not really much of a problem. They're the largest predator around, but there's so much prey for them (rodents and other small animals), that they prefer to hunt solo. It's kinda rare for them to hunt in a group, although it's definitely not unknown for them to take down deer in particularly cold years.
      The only (regular) predator of deer around here is humans. And frankly, our DNR should probably extend the hunting season and issue more deer tags. It's not as bad as it was back in the 50s, but the deer population is still much bigger than it reasonably should be.

    • @oldnumber5866
      @oldnumber5866 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@SadisticSenpai61 I normally hunt nowadays on my daughter’s land. Use to be a lot of elk and deer there but now wolves are moving in. My son-in-law says they’re up by Hangman’s Creek now and deer, elk, and coyotes just aren’t seen much anymore.

    • @whatabouttheearth
      @whatabouttheearth Před 3 měsíci +1

      They tried to kill off the wolf and they almost did... they tried to do the same to the Coyote and the Coyotes range and population expanded greatly.
      The clever trickster of the Americas ain't nothing to fuck with

  • @Itried20takennames
    @Itried20takennames Před 7 dny

    I live near a small woodland park surrounded by very dense suburbia, and a significant coyote pack lives there. They wake us up at 2 am with their weird laughing, howling cries to draw the pack together. You generally only get a few glimpses of them at dusk or dawn, but some will come close to houses.

  • @scarlettcerutti7930
    @scarlettcerutti7930 Před 9 dny

    I live in east San Diego county and growing up, all of our chickens had been eaten by coyotes. Even though we tried techniques to keep them safe.
    And worst of all, our chihuahua mix was unfortunately attacked in our own backyard at about 8pm by a coyote. Our dog had just went through the doggy door to go potty outside and within seconds, the coyote jumped our 6ft fence and grabbed hold of him. We heard the yelps and ran outside clapping and yelling and scared the coyote off. Our dog survived but had insanely deep and, almost clean cut, punctures caused by the coyotes bite.
    We learned our lesson and do not allow our dogs out by themselves into our fenced backyard, unless it’s total daylight.
    From time to time on our street, late at night, a coyote will catch its prey and howl/yelp out and before you know it, there’s what sounds to be 10-15 coyotes all joining in. It’s an eerie sound to experience.
    And I’ve commented before on the channel about black widows, they are very much alive and prevalent here in Southern California. Being born and raised here, you learn to inspect for black widows before playing with things outside (like those little ride in kid cars and houses) and anything in a shed or garage.
    Animals to keep an eye out for here, in my personal order of scariness are;
    1. Coyotes (if you have something that can be eaten by one)
    2. Black widows (also tied with brown recluse spiders)
    3. Rattle snakes
    4. Mountain lions

  • @bushcraftbasics2036
    @bushcraftbasics2036 Před 3 měsíci +135

    Some guy kept adopting cats from the local shelter for his daughter but would allow them out at night. Well the local coyotes would get the cat and he would go back and get a new cat.
    The shelter staff saw him coming back and asked why. He told them what happened and how he wanted a new cat for his little girl and the staff member said something like "it sounds more like you are feeding the coyotes"

    • @Wolfie54545
      @Wolfie54545 Před 3 měsíci +12

      This was a twitter post I think.

    • @bushcraftbasics2036
      @bushcraftbasics2036 Před 3 měsíci +20

      @@Wolfie54545 I am sure it made its rounds, I heard it years ago (before Twitter) from my father.
      He would have heard it from someone else, who also likely heard it from someone else.
      I do get a kick out of seeing "new" stories and jokes on social media I remember hearing growing up in the 70's and 80's.

    • @aquachonk
      @aquachonk Před 3 měsíci +20

      @@bushcraftbasics2036 Try this: Replace every mention of a cat with the words "cute little puppy" and see how the joke lands. Oh, you mean it's not funny when a cute little puppy has its tail set on fire by idiots and it runs across a yard burning and crying, a cute little puppy is run over by a golf cart by drunken teenagers, or a cute little puppy is torn apart by coyotes, terrified and screaming in pain? Maybe it's not funny, then.

    • @ericweston7353
      @ericweston7353 Před 3 měsíci +8

      ​@@aquachonk Nah, it's still funny

    • @angrytheclown801
      @angrytheclown801 Před 3 měsíci +5

      ​@@aquachonkIs your real name TNT? Because you sure love blowing everything out of proportion.

  • @tricitymorte1
    @tricitymorte1 Před 3 měsíci +96

    Speaking of coyotes as pets, this channel has probably the best example of the closest you can get to have one as a pet: Timmy mc. For a while, he had just the coyote that he rescued, he named her Weave. Then, he also had a raccoon friend he named Johnny Ringtail, who has sort of disappeared now. Then he got his dog, Duck Holliday, then a cat, and now another dog, that he's introducing to Weave. They all get along so well. Weave has a couple dens near the house, so she very much feels safe with him nearby.

    • @minagelina
      @minagelina Před 3 měsíci +18

      I love his channel! He's from southern Illinois a few hours from me.

    • @simonesmit6708
      @simonesmit6708 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@minagelinaditto

    • @rekkariley652
      @rekkariley652 Před 3 měsíci +14

      Cat’s name is Howie (“Howie Dewitt”) and the new dog is Schteeve.

    • @katieme7165
      @katieme7165 Před 3 měsíci +11

      In a town in Massachusetts, actually close to Boston we have huge blond coyotes! They are beautiful , and cause no harm. The reason they cause now harm is because in my town, chicken and pet owners are smart enough to take precaustions

    • @butterbeanqueen8148
      @butterbeanqueen8148 Před 3 měsíci +14

      I watched Weave being brushed. 😂

  • @MattMangels
    @MattMangels Před 3 měsíci +1

    I saw a couple of them casually strolling through Golden Gate Park the other night.

  • @Evil_Chronic
    @Evil_Chronic Před 5 dny

    I live in an area with a lot of wild life. And about 10 years ago, my neighbor accross the street lost their dog to a coyote. It was a yorkie, and they let it out in the rod-iron fenced yard to go potty in the morning. I was in my garage cleaning up tools, when I heard a dog screaming like crazy. I ran outside, and I see a coyote with his head through the fence pulling the yorkie through the bars. It then ran away with the dog once I came running out shouting at it. So sad, but thats nature.

  • @CobraDBlade
    @CobraDBlade Před 3 měsíci +23

    I grew up mostly in the rural midwest. Coyotes, and thus a need for a good "varmint rifle" were a fact of life.

    • @GeseppiOoodblast
      @GeseppiOoodblast Před 3 měsíci +1

      I'm from rural Ohio and yeah you're right. My 10/22 scared off a lot of them during my childhood never needed to actually shoot them though. They know what a gun sounds like and does. Raccoons however were not as lucky. Entire flocks of chickens were lost to raccoons

  • @Mountlougallops
    @Mountlougallops Před 3 měsíci +93

    I love coyotes but their mating howls can be bloodcurdling.

    • @SodaMehPop
      @SodaMehPop Před 3 měsíci +6

      Their howling isn't always for mating necessarily, it's often a sort of "roll call" which is used to measure their numbers. If a lower percentage than expected number of coyotes respond to the howling then the females will actually produce more pups during pregnancy. It's one of the reasons they're so populous. And annoying🎉

    • @littlebitofhope1489
      @littlebitofhope1489 Před 3 měsíci +7

      In addition to what Soda says, they can also do that when they make a kill. That is actually more likely what you are hearing.

    • @BrianRRenfro
      @BrianRRenfro Před 3 měsíci +5

      The howling is a lot more loving if you take em to dinner and buy em a few drinks first.

    • @user-jn9gv9ve6e
      @user-jn9gv9ve6e Před 3 měsíci +2

      i love their howls which start as the sun goes down into the night. they are very smart. while bow hunting, sitting in a stand in michigan you see them. as soon as they see you they head the other way. and yes if you have cats or small dogs don't leave them unattended.

    • @SodaMehPop
      @SodaMehPop Před 3 měsíci

      @@BrianRRenfro 😆

  • @peterfconley
    @peterfconley Před 3 měsíci +1

    Coyotes are wickedly clever creatures. We have them where I grew up and a neighbor said one faked an injury to try to trick his dog into following right into an ambush. They would hunt turkeys on a golf course I worked at. Fascinating beasts!

  • @gw2955
    @gw2955 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I live in a forest in the country, and I LOVE to hear coyotes howling and yipping in the night. I don't own chickens or other livestock, but coyotes are often around my property. They are usually big scardy cats. If I turn my outside lights on, they run away. If I clap my hands they run away. So this is one American who doesn't mind coyotes at all.

  • @essaboselin5252
    @essaboselin5252 Před 3 měsíci +52

    I remember as a kid in the 70s there were reports of coyotes in our area. The local wildlife folks dismissed the sighting, saying there were no coyotes anywhere near us. About a week later, the local paper ran a collection of photographs people sent in. They were coyotes.

    • @user-jn9gv9ve6e
      @user-jn9gv9ve6e Před 3 měsíci +9

      they said the same thing about mountain lions in the u.p. of michigan. until some were hit by cars.

    • @sapphossmalldog228
      @sapphossmalldog228 Před 3 měsíci

      Same in Massachusetts. They said there were no big cats in Massachusetts. Then a bobcat showed up hit by a car on a university campus. Whoops. ​@@user-jn9gv9ve6e

    • @elonever.2.071
      @elonever.2.071 Před 3 měsíci +11

      The same with mountain lions in New York State. The DEC and rangers say there aren't any and I have seen their tracks in the dust of an old cement plant I use to ride my quad in.

    • @absalomdraconis
      @absalomdraconis Před 3 měsíci +6

      ​@@elonever.2.071 : Try setting up a game camera, you might get some nice shots.

    • @hollyheikkinen4698
      @hollyheikkinen4698 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@user-jn9gv9ve6eMinnesota DNR has had the same answer that cougars aren't in the state for decades - but lots of people have seen them here in Northeastern Minnesota on the Iron Range (me included). They used to always say that the person who saw one misidentified them & it was a bobcat instead. Umm, there's quite a difference between the two felines. In recent years, they admit that there have been sightings - but that it's a lone one or a couple males that roam a large multi state area & that we don't have any breeding pairs. Who knows how accurate the state's official answers are.

  • @sandywatts2078
    @sandywatts2078 Před 3 měsíci +30

    We currently have a fairly large pack of coyotes around our housing development here in Southwestern Arizona. We ( neighbors) all notify each other if we see them but usually we hear the pack “talking” to each other before we’ll see them. As many here have small dogs we all go outside with them. You must remember if the coyotes are hungry and hunting in a pack a large dog is at risk too. Go out with your dog no matter what size he or she may be. The coyote standing in front of your dog is not the one you need to worry about so much as the 2 or 3 on the sides in the shadows

    • @jayerscios
      @jayerscios Před 3 měsíci +1

      Yep, I live in a complex where they have signs that say Beware of the coyotes. It's like our own little ecosystem. There have been several small dogs who have been taken. You're right. You have to be aware that there is more than one. The first one is to distract. The others are to take the pet dog. Especially if they're off leash.

    • @SadisticSenpai61
      @SadisticSenpai61 Před 3 měsíci +3

      Interesting. Ofc coyotes rarely hunt in packs where I live (Northern Midwest). They typically hunt solo and go after rodents and small animals for the most part (which does include cats).
      The vast majority of dogs are pretty safe from coyotes around here. Especially the ones that bark a lot - barking tends to get humans coming to see what's going on, after all.
      Occasionally, they'll group up and take down a deer. But that's usually only in winter when food is scarce.
      They will definitely scavenge any dead animal if given the chance. And they will happily break into a chicken coup if they can (but so will a ton of other predators which will probably get there before the coyotes).

    • @ANPC-pi9vu
      @ANPC-pi9vu Před 3 měsíci +1

      You are exaggerating. They don't go after large dogs. Large dogs do go after them to guard property or livestock, however, understandably so... but coyotes do not see large dogs as prey. They also only hunt in packs if they are desperate due to depletion of smaller prey in an area.

    • @TheAttacker732
      @TheAttacker732 Před 3 měsíci

      Generally, they scatter after buckshot, er... *Scatters* the first one.

    • @dragonace119
      @dragonace119 Před 3 hodinami

      @@ANPC-pi9vu Nah I have a 90 pound pointer mix and I was in my driveway watching him and heard a noise and out of nowhere two Coyotes jumped him. Unluckily for them he's much stronger than they were and I had a pocket knife. Even before then I've had nieghbors get their dogs of similar size get attacked by one or two of them so nobody here takes any chances.

  • @ponyxaviors4491
    @ponyxaviors4491 Před měsícem

    In my childhood, there was a coyote that lived in a nearby wood for a time. I loved hearing its howl at night, which also both fascinated and alarmed my Siberian Husky.

  • @Avi_Z.
    @Avi_Z. Před 3 měsíci +1

    I listen to them howling at night. There is something comforting about it.

  • @internet_introvert
    @internet_introvert Před 3 měsíci +40

    When I lived in my old house, when you heard an amulace with it's siren on go flying by on the nearby highway after it started getting dark, you could hear the pack of coyotes living in the woods out back freaking out and yelling back at it in the same tone.
    It was amusing at first.

    • @AlyKatKitty
      @AlyKatKitty Před 3 měsíci +2

      My German shepherd used to do that, as well.

    • @cbpd89
      @cbpd89 Před 3 měsíci +2

      The first time I heard coyotes (a pack liked to congregate in the parking lot of my apartment) I thought it was a bunch of young girls heading out for spring break or something. The "wooooooo" had such a human quality to it. Then a bunch more joined in and no other human sounds followed, so I figured it out. 🤣

    • @strawman6085
      @strawman6085 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Ahhh, nothing like the sound of young women full of hormones and howling at the moon.

    • @mrychards6682
      @mrychards6682 Před 3 měsíci +1

      The coyotes near me hang out along the railroad tracks. Their yipping starts when an approaching train is getting closer.

  • @markrenfrow9873
    @markrenfrow9873 Před 3 měsíci +246

    Rural west Kentuckian here. Lost a Jack Russel terrier to coyote's about 9 years ago. Our Russel was big of heart and small of brain, and took the fight to them. His throat was punctured and he made it home, slowly drowning in his own blood. Vet ended the suffering. I still have hard feelings for coyotes.

    • @mlebrooks
      @mlebrooks Před 3 měsíci +26

      I’m so sorry

    • @justaride1366
      @justaride1366 Před 3 měsíci +33

      When I was a young teenager, the coyotes got my dachshund. He was a scrapper, and probably challenged the coyote. We found his collar. Life on a farm is not always idyllic...

    • @DonnaBarrHerself
      @DonnaBarrHerself Před 3 měsíci +35

      Well, they're the Natives, and we invasive pest species take their food and homes. They gotta eat something.

    • @wizardsuth
      @wizardsuth Před 3 měsíci +11

      @@DonnaBarrHerself They're not indigenous to my area, but I've seen a few around, and found their tracks in the snow.

    • @SpeakerWiggin49
      @SpeakerWiggin49 Před 3 měsíci +19

      You're terrier could have easily been bitten on the neck by another dog, or even have it's spine broken by a deer. Just because it was a coyote doesn't mean the situation your dog found itself in was anything other than bad luck.

  • @redleg1376
    @redleg1376 Před 29 dny +1

    I grew up in the Pacific Northwest and we pronounced it with 3 syllables, now I live in the Midwest and it’s 2 syllables here.

  • @ibtsdad
    @ibtsdad Před měsícem +1

    Your ability to hide sarcasm in any situation is an Olympic feat and most people I know have no sense o this sublime talent

  • @kedeglow2743
    @kedeglow2743 Před 3 měsíci +139

    We live in a very rural area of Missouri. On our small acreage we've seen many coyotes, bald eagles, a black bear and her cubs, and one time we even saw a pair of wolves passing through our northern pasture. We've also had cougar tracks in our garden, and I've heard them scream on numerous occasions.
    We've lost barn cats to coyotes, and chickens to foxes, raccoons, and possums (probably known as opossums across the pond). Fortunately our dogs are too big to be bothered by coyotes.

    • @aff77141
      @aff77141 Před 3 měsíci +12

      terribly tragic that your animals were dragged into natures order, but I hope you don't hold it against all those amazing creatures and keep an appropriate awe for them, blessing and a curse that they're not too afraid of your land

    • @superman9772
      @superman9772 Před 3 měsíci +8

      yep... i live in mid mo north of the river... coyotes every night...

    • @TiredMomma
      @TiredMomma Před 3 měsíci +3

      Last year we had an unidentified creature, and we only saw its color of fur and its rough size as it darted toward the trees.
      It was kinda a darkish brown color, short stubby legs, short neck, flat long tail but the height of a large dog and just shorter than a white tail deer. This was like late fall last year. Haven't seen it since.

    • @westzed23
      @westzed23 Před 3 měsíci +8

      You might need to get a Guardian Herd Dog if you keep losing livestock.

    • @TiredMomma
      @TiredMomma Před 3 měsíci +6

      A mountain lion or bob cat gifted us some raw partially digested meat on a deck of a place we used to live at.
      I could tell there was rabbit fur, dead mice and owl parts. The amount would've been too much for a bob cat to hold in its stomach, so not sure which, but there was a reported sighting of a mountain lion just a few months prior, and I know I heard one when I was in the woods but thankfully at the edge, so we ran to go back inside. Mind you, we had an acre of backyard space still to run up and it sounded like the mountain lion was close 😬

  • @cbpd89
    @cbpd89 Před 3 měsíci +41

    I lived many years in southern Arizona where none of the wildlife seems to care that we're there at all. Just walking around my neighborhood you could see rattlesnakes, every lizard, rabbits, roadrunners, owls, vultures, falcons, javalinas, and coyotes. Every once in a while even a cougar might come down from the mountains and wander the suburbs after dark.
    So even during pleasant winter weather people don't often leave their pets outside 😁
    I watched a coyote chase a rabbit once, but to my everlasting sadness I never saw a coyote chasing a roadrunner.

    • @zammyb4535
      @zammyb4535 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Yes to all of this! I’m a Tucson native and still live here. We just cohabitate with our wildlife and inform others who transplant here.😉

    • @libbylandscape3560
      @libbylandscape3560 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Beep beep!😂

    • @erakfishfishfish
      @erakfishfishfish Před 3 měsíci +1

      I’m in SoCal and the coyotes here stroll the sidewalks in the mornings like they’re just another pedestrian. I quickly learned if you leave them alone, they leave you alone.

    • @miriamrobarts
      @miriamrobarts Před 3 měsíci +1

      Arizona also has scorpions in the suburbs. (But you can hire exterminators.)

    • @jenniferpanther2979
      @jenniferpanther2979 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@zammyb4535Yep, not native, but have been here ten years. Just this past Friday I picked up my dachshund while on a walk and waited for two coyotes to meander their way down the sidewalk and back into the wash. Had to wait for one to stop and have a poop. 😂

  • @grotemuis4889
    @grotemuis4889 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I love listening to the coyotes singing at night. And the yip-yapping between different family groups. They are shy but very smart. A family member once watched from his tractor how two coyotes (Kai-OTES) were sneaking up on the farm dog, one from the left, the other from the right. The dog was oblivious until the very last moment and then he ran for his life! He made it safely back to the tractor but it was close.

  • @lilolmecj
    @lilolmecj Před 3 měsíci +1

    Next up…the Roadrunner! They are actual birds, tough little critters, they eat snakes! They are common in the Southwest, really interesting birds. I grew up in TX and Oklahoma, we went with the “oat” sounding end of coyote.

    • @janharris8672
      @janharris8672 Před měsícem +1

      I can attest to this. When I lived in Oklahoma, I called them "ki-yotes". After I moved to Arizona, I had to start calling them "ki-YO-ties" so people wouldn't look at me funny. I think your earlier pronunciation map is reversed. But it's the only mistake I've found in your videos.

  • @patmanchester8045
    @patmanchester8045 Před 3 měsíci +24

    I used to live in a close in suburb of Madison Wi. there was a coyote who kept coming in to "play" with a young ( but full sized) female lab; about 1 3/4 bigger than the coyote. What he was really doing was trying to lure her out to his pack ( they used to be relatively solitary, but more food has made them live in lose family groups) He wanted to have her for a family dinner.Coyotes ,wolves ( yes, I know their track from a big dog and I followed them in the snow) eagles and great horned owls would swoop in and take cats and dogs up to 20 lbs. I did NOT take any risk with my 30 pound dog. I could see the eagles come down from riding the currents to check him out and after sizing him up, they would go back up higher in the sky.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Před 3 měsíci

      I live in Rhode Island and I have heard similar stories here. I used to live in madison! I still miss some things about that City but not the snow

    • @patmanchester8045
      @patmanchester8045 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@LindaC616 I now live in North East Wi. Every day I turn to the west and bow to Madison. I really miss it.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Před 3 měsíci

      @@patmanchester8045 A few years ago a friend that I had met there in grad school lost her husband, so I went to visit her. We drove down from Minneapolis for the weekend for old times' sake; it has changed quite a bit. It was good for me to go because I had for many years been pining over the life that I had there and it made me realize that it's not the same now as it was. Many of the unique restaurants on State street are gone and there are mostly chain restaurants. I'm sure housing is expensive, and as we walked to dinner one night, we had cops running up-and-down the street with a dog searching for someone. And they went into the alley with their guns drawn. That would not have happened in the days I was there.

    • @johnsmith-js9nv
      @johnsmith-js9nv Před 3 měsíci +2

      I live in Madison too. SW suburbs. I have game cam pics of three coyotes and later seven deer in the same night. In the previous year I have personally taken iPad photos of an eleven point buck and some of his harem in my back yard. I can’t describe how much I wanted to get the crossbow and harvest him. I live in the ‘burbs with some light woods nearby. Wildlife is EVERYWHERE.

    • @seameology
      @seameology Před 3 měsíci +3

      I'm in northern Minnesota. My sister lives on a swampish lake that eagles like to nest. Every time I bring my dog there, they swoop down to look. She's too big. I saw one try to fly away with a roadkill fawn. The fawn was too heavy to fly with. I wish I had a photo.

  • @peterkoester7358
    @peterkoester7358 Před 3 měsíci +45

    While living in Massachusetts in 2010 I was attending a summer party at a friend's home not far north of Boston. As we were all sitting in the back yard drinking and conversing, a coyote stepped out of the bushes on one side about 50 feet away, proceeded to the middle of the yard, paused to look at all of us as we stared back, then continued on through the bushes on the other side of the yard.
    Wasn't my first or last coyote encounter living in New England, but perhaps the most memorable.

  • @murraystewartj
    @murraystewartj Před 12 dny

    As a teen in the 70s in rural southern BC, orchard country, I remember a summer when neighbours a ways over had grandkids and their cat visit for a few weeks. City folks, all, and they didn't realize what all that yipping at night on the hills behind us meant so the grandkids' cat was allowed to roam in the sweet, safe country. After a few days, as I rode my bike past their driveway I saw a hand lettered "lost cat" sign on a power pole with a description of said cat, a reward offer and a phone number. Me, being the cheeky 14 year-old I was, made my own sign and tacked it under the original. It read something to the effect of, "Cat found, it was delicious, for more information contact the coyotes who live up the hill. PS, when are you going to let the next one out, as we're planning on company next week." Both signs were gone day later. Sorry kiddos, it's the circle of life.

  • @robertabarnhart6240
    @robertabarnhart6240 Před 3 měsíci +2

    The best way to protect your pets from coyotes and other predators is to keep them inside. Unfortunately my cat disagrees, and she frequently runs out of the house when I open the door. Fortunately, she's got super sharp claws, and anything she can't outfight she can outrun.

  • @bigthing75
    @bigthing75 Před 3 měsíci +18

    I love it when I'm sitting outside and sirens start blaring and the coyotes start howling with them. Southeastern Wisconsin here.

  • @TheJudiBambiPurrsParadox
    @TheJudiBambiPurrsParadox Před 3 měsíci +24

    *I love hearing coyotes and wolves do their nightly howlfests. Lived in Arizona for 32 years now back in New Jersey..but in Arizona, we just said 'yotes {as in yo-tees}.*

    • @ndfnq7811
      @ndfnq7811 Před 3 měsíci +1

      We say coyote in Arizona too but we're not talking about wild dogs

  • @WildWestRosie
    @WildWestRosie Před 29 dny

    I lived in Arizona, and we'd often hear the coyotes on the prowl. My cats would look alarmed for a second, then go back to sleep.
    When I got chickens, until I sealed up all the access holes, the local coyotes, owls, skunks, and bob cats, thought that I ran a mighty fine chicken buffet!

  • @lisaburt7118
    @lisaburt7118 Před 2 měsíci

    I live in the mountains along Colorado’s front range. When my hubby and I bought our home back in the late 80’s we often heard packs of coyotes (I say it with three syllables) howling at night, especially during the summer. As our area developed over the next few decades we saw them less and less. I haven’t seen a coyote for at least 5 years now, and I really miss seeing them. I remember once walking with my two dogs in the woods when a mated pair followed us for nearly an hour. I suspected they had a den in the area and we were in their territory. Their taking us finally culminated in the male running up to my larger dog ( who was the most timid) and nipping her in the hind end. She took off for home like a shot, and when I later arrived home, she was sitting on the front porch waiting, hanging her head in shame 😂, presumably, because she abandoned me and my other dog to our fates! Coyotes are beautiful and resilient animals.

  • @autodidactin
    @autodidactin Před 3 měsíci +35

    I think Laurence’s “deer caught in the headlights” default look is apt for a videos about coyotes! 😂

  • @Blondie42
    @Blondie42 Před 3 měsíci +41

    I use both pronunciations of Coyote interchangeably.

    • @freethebirds3578
      @freethebirds3578 Před 3 měsíci +3

      When I first moved to the West, someone was talking about going out hunting, and said something about Kyle. The conversation continued fir a while until I could break in and ask who Kyle was. The way they pronounced coyote sounded like "Kyle" to my southern ears.

    • @asafoetidajones8181
      @asafoetidajones8181 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Pure chaos

    • @HammerOn-bu7gx
      @HammerOn-bu7gx Před 3 měsíci +3

      Where I grew up we typical use coyot as a singlar/specific animal and coyote as a plural.

    • @Blondie42
      @Blondie42 Před 3 měsíci

      @@HammerOn-bu7gx I think that is how I also learned it, in the PNW

  • @dionysiacosmos
    @dionysiacosmos Před měsícem

    My husband and I were standing in the backyard of our big old house/apartment building in Muphy, NC known as The Gateway to The Smokies. (Many old houses there still have outbuildings that were once stables.) The back of the yard sloped steeply uphill and was mostly covered in low grass and other plants that made good cover for the grounding colony there. On this particular day we were looking at a juvenile groundhog sitting above the cover on a relatively level spot where the colony's inhabitants often sat to look at their surroundings.
    We were talking about the coyote we had seen emerge from the cover the day before. I had just finished saying it was a good hunting place as groundhogs are not very bright. Just as the words left my mouth and for no apparent reason the little groundhog plummeted downhill, rolling over and over again for 25 ft until it hit the heavy cover at the bottom of the incline. Yep. That's a groundhog.

  • @wilclark2562
    @wilclark2562 Před 12 dny

    Growing up in the Midwest I used to hear packs of 30+ coyotes yowling and barking into the night. At times they actually just sounded like small dogs just learning to speak for the first time.

  • @jaikaiel6248
    @jaikaiel6248 Před 3 měsíci +46

    I live on the northwest side of Chicago. While coming out of an alley with my large but friendly dog, we spotted a coyote directly across the street. We stopped, he stopped, looked at us for a bit and continued trotting on his way. We ran a block home, fumbled to put the key in the door just like in a horror movie, opened it, and breathed a sigh of relief. Later, I read up on them and found that they can run up to 40 mph. We weren’t even close.

    • @JPMJPM
      @JPMJPM Před 3 měsíci +12

      You were never in danger. They’re not like wolves.

    • @Og-Judy
      @Og-Judy Před 3 měsíci +4

      Live in northern suburban Milwaukee metro area. Un nerving they trot through neighborhood backyards hrere. I would never let a small dog out on a leash alone. 😦😬

    • @harleyanne3720
      @harleyanne3720 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@JPMJPMread up on the aspiring singer who was jogging and attacked by a pack of coyotes. I encountered one and he ran away. Never know.

    • @celesteredding1550
      @celesteredding1550 Před 3 měsíci +4

      ​@@JPMJPMif a single coyote is hungry or feels threatened, it most certainly will attack.

    • @JPMJPM
      @JPMJPM Před 3 měsíci +5

      @@celesteredding1550 It will attack something small, yes, but very rarely a human.

  • @danhollifield
    @danhollifield Před 3 měsíci +83

    Here in Georgia, the first time I saw a coyote was on the University of Georgia campus when one jumped out of a dumpster and ran off into the night as I pulled into a dormitory parking lot to drop off a friend after a party. This would have been in 1976-77 or so. Having grown up on a farm about 25 miles from downtown Athens GA, I had seen foxes and deer roaming around, as well as heard coyotes howling at night. I now live within 3 miles of the family farm, in a spot where the woods are just 20 meters or so from the back door of my house. There are coyotes in the woods, as well as foxes, bear, deer, wild boar, pheasant, quail, dozens of species of snakes--including 3 of the 4 venomous species in the US, feral dogs, feral cats, and it wouldn't surprise me to find out there were cougars too--although they would have to be very rare because the area has too many housing developments scattered about for the comfort of big cats.
    One night, our dogs were barking up a storm--interesting turn of phrase, that--so I grabbed a headlamp and a pistol and went outside of our backyard chain-link fence to see if I could spot whatever the dogs had heard. I got to the edge of the woods, switched the headlamp to its red lightbulb, and spotted a small pack of coyotes about 20 meters deeper into the woods. The wind was in my face, so they hadn't scented me yet, and I stood quietly observing them for a moment or two. I counted 8 of them, their eyes reflecting the dim light from my headlamp, before the wind changed direction and they caught my scent. Their heads turned towards me, then they bolted off into the night, not wanting to be anywhere near a human. I stood still, listening to them running away across the leaf-strewn forest floor, until the night was quiet once more. Then I turned and walked back to my house.

    • @pinchebruha405
      @pinchebruha405 Před 3 měsíci +12

      You’re a writer ❤😊

    • @danhollifield
      @danhollifield Před 3 měsíci +10

      @@pinchebruha405, indeed, I am. I've a pair of books out, short stories in three anthologies, another pair of books at my publisher awaiting editing and formatting, and about five unfinished books on the back burner. I'm also a composer with nine albums on Bandcamp, a painter with a few works in private galleries, and I run a creative writing website that's been online for 27 years. I don't normally mention all that in comments on someone else's channel, though. You simply caught me out, LOL!

    • @Scruffi
      @Scruffi Před 3 měsíci +3

      Interesting - I spent (misspent?) a lot of time in Athens in the 90s and I don't recall ever running into Coyotes there. Maybe they had gotten shyer by then because of the increasing population? Weirdly, later when I moved to LA, I saw them regularly in the Hollywood neighborhoods.
      Also, Go Dawgs :)

    • @danhollifield
      @danhollifield Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@Scruffi, that would make perfect sense. More people in an area means more danger for a coyote. Even the ones who have adjusted to surviving in urban settings might judge when an area has gotten too built up, and move into quieter, less people-y areas.

    • @AndrewAMartin
      @AndrewAMartin Před 3 měsíci +7

      ​@@danhollifield The modern Eastern Coyote has changed, genetically, due to interbreeding with dogs and wolves, and become less afraid of humans. They're bigger than their Western cousins, and less pack oriented. There are occasional reports of them in neighborhoods here in Harrisburg PA, and I saw one awhile back running across the road (ironically, just a mile or so from the headquarters of the PA Game Commission) on the north side of town.

  • @fredbunce9232
    @fredbunce9232 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Lot's of them in southwest Pennsylvania. When i go in the woods with my dog and grandchildren my friend Walther goes along.

  • @maverick9708
    @maverick9708 Před 2 měsíci +1

    exactly right, most Americans honestly don't really have to deal with coyotes, they just kind of loom in the background unnoticed unless they are howling or eating pets. the Americans who really have to deal with them are living out in rural places and have livestock which get threatened and occasionally eaten by them; most of them have a surprise explosion tool called a firearm to deal with coyotes/wild pigs when their livestock is in the process of being mauled or crops are being damaged

  • @MasterBiffpudwell
    @MasterBiffpudwell Před 3 měsíci +15

    I grew up hunting and trapping coyotes.
    Made quite a bit of money on furs.
    It helped to put food on the table.
    Where I grew up we called them coy dogs or coyts.

  • @nhansen197
    @nhansen197 Před 3 měsíci +90

    When it comes to Coyotes hunting pets, there have been plenty of attacks in broad daylight.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Před 3 měsíci +3

      2 last week by a rabid one here, and last year, a child on a Cape Cod beach

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Před 3 měsíci +3

      And another one two weeks from its owner's yard, when it was on a leash

    • @christineperez7562
      @christineperez7562 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Most coyotes won't hurt your pets. They run away easily as long as they don't have rabies or their babies are nearby.
      Coyotes are sweet animals.

    • @TheGrinningViking
      @TheGrinningViking Před 3 měsíci +2

      Coyotes are social animals. That means if they like you, and they shouldn't because that means you or someone else approached them and got them used to humans, they are sweet animals.
      But they kill pets and attack small children. If they know you it won't be your pet or small child, they smell like you, but your neighbors would be correct to be angry with you if you had been friendly with the coyotes that decided to kill fluffy and maul their two year old.

    • @LindaC616
      @LindaC616 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @TheGrinningViking That is the big problem that we run into where I live. People are putting out cat food for stray cats or skunks or raccoons. But they don't realize that it's also attracting the coyotes and when there is a good food supply (and we also have lots of restaurants here because of tourism), then that means they will have more pups. When food is scarce, fewer pups are born.

  • @hellofrominside8524
    @hellofrominside8524 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I live in a pretty forested area and I’ve only seen a handful of coyotes (I always say kai-ote) but fairly often if I’m outside around midnight I can hear em in the nearby fields. It’s pretty cool ambiance for a late night toke

  • @glenmacnicol7825
    @glenmacnicol7825 Před 20 dny

    Florida: Covid lockdown. I'm standing in my driveway in small town America. It's a beautiful night, soft breeze. I can smell orange blossoms miles away. Then I heard a sound, a huffing sound, rhythmic and coming closer. I quickly check my perimeter, trying to determine where the threat is coming from. I turn back to the street and there's a Chihuahua at top speed and a pretty darn fast coyote a few yards behind. It was a tight race, but my money was on the Chihuahua. I knew him. He only understood Spanish, he often tried to block passing cars, he could climb a chain link fence and he was called Diablo. I saw him after that night, making a fuss out in front of my house as a car tried to get by. Tough Little Bastard.

  • @BigNews2021
    @BigNews2021 Před 3 měsíci +27

    I live in greater Los Angeles, on the foothills of the San Gabriel mountains, and we see coyotes quite frequently. Summer mornings when I go for a jog/walk I encounter them several times during the season. What surprises me is how fast they are. You see them go down the middle of the road or on the sidewalk doing that little trot they do and you think they're going as fast as a human walking at fast pace. But no, they leave on the dust. It's also amazing how they can just disappear behind a bush and you'd never know that they were there.

  • @zammyb4535
    @zammyb4535 Před 3 měsíci +27

    Tucson, AZ native here and we just cohabitate with our wildlife and do our best to inform transplants. I live in the middle of the city right off one of the busiest six lane streets and I’ve heard packs yipping excitedly very close by the last three nights in a row, had neighbors see packs of them very close by in recent days, had them walking on top of my 6’ cinderblock wall, etc. They are just a part of our existence here and traverse the arroyos that run through our neighborhoods. My mom lost a dog to a mountain lion in her urban neighborhood and AZ Game and Fish had to tranquillize a bear that had been in a large public park less than a block from her house. For the most part we embrace and respect our wildlife here. The wildlife that makes me panic and run away are javelinas!😆

    • @ben8147
      @ben8147 Před 3 měsíci

      lol, I've never seen a Javelina, but I can attest that even being in an area rumored to host javelinas is enough to get people nervous.

    • @thejustlawofshamash
      @thejustlawofshamash Před 3 měsíci +2

      I've never run into a javelina before, but I have run into wild hogs while hiking around the south. They're the only animal that lives east of the Mississippi that truly inspires fear in me. I watched that hog hook it's tusk around a pretty well established palmetto bush and tear it straight out of the ground like it was nothing. I just crouched down and stayed as quiet as I could. Felt like I was one of the hobbits hiding from the hunting ringwraiths. I figure I can't possibly fare any better during a confrontation than ol Robert Baratheon.

    • @glyniscoleman4813
      @glyniscoleman4813 Před 3 měsíci

      Javelinas are extremely dangerous as well as the wild hogs in FL run into both

    • @smmar194
      @smmar194 Před 2 měsíci +2

      *Sees a coyote walking down the same sidewalk as me in the middle of the night* "Ah! A fellow Phoenix pedestrian. Well met, stranger."
      *Sees a javelina doing the same* "I wonder how fast I could climb that tree..."

  • @patricklee5239
    @patricklee5239 Před 3 měsíci

    When I lived in Oakville, Ontario, I once had a coyote pass by 30 feet away from me while I was out riding my bike. I had to do a double take as I initially mistook it for a loose dog. There were plenty of wooded areas around there, and coyotes were quite common. I even had a friend tell me that sometimes at night they could hear coyote packs hunting dear in the ravine near their house. Apparently coyotes aren't as good at killing deer as wolves, so it takes longer and is... louder.

  • @donttalktomebye
    @donttalktomebye Před 2 měsíci

    Tacoma recently lost jawless jerry, a local icon who was a coyote who manages to survive, hunt, and eat with the loss of her jaw. Unfortunately she was hit by a car, some community members gave her a beautiful funeral.
    Coyotes are often associated with trickery and nuisance but theyre an incredible and resilient animal that adapts to its environment. I love them so much