From: Mollie Matteson
Conservation Advocate
Center for Biological Diversity
Northeast Field Office
PO Box 188
Richmond, VT 05477
802-434-2388 (office)
802-318-1487 (cell)
mmatteson@biologicaldiversity.org
http://www.biologicaldiversity.org/
Beat the Cold: Kill a Coyote(as printed in Outdoors Magazne)
With temperatures predicted to drop well below zero over the next three days across the East, many people are preparing for a weekend of watching football and sitting by a fireplace. Devout predator hunters are taking a different view though, and to them the impending temperatures are a reason for celebration. The colder the better, said Bill Savage, a coyote hunting specialist from the Tug Hill Region of New York. My best days coyote hunting are when the temperature never gets above zero. If it gets as cold as they say it will well, lets just say I am like a kid in a candy store.
Bob Howe, the owner of Pine Grove Lodge in Bingham, Maine, has a simple explanation for this phenomenon. In essence, in the colder weather a coyote needs to expend more energy to stay warm. This means they need to feed more, and the hunters who have their baits set will reap the rewards. Everybody thinks coyotes will only hit the bait in the evening or at night, but that time around noon can also be very productive, said Howe. Two of his hunters experienced this first hand earlier today when they both killed coyotes hitting baits a few minutes past 11:00 a.m.
Coyote hunting in the extreme cold does take some special preparation. Gun actions can freeze and calls can act and sound differently than in warmer conditions. Plus, there are the inherent dangers that come with below-zero temperatures. For those willing to pay the price though the rewards cant be beat.
For more information and predator hunting tricks, check out the March issue of Outdoors Magazine with a special insert When Hunters Become The Hunted�detailing the methods some of the East's best use to put fur in the shed.
2 comments:
If the hunters could be educated about the role of predators in nature the wolf could come back to the North East. To bad the writer doesn't have more of a life that he celebrates a chance to have it cold enough outside to chill his fantasy while he is waiting to kill a coyote, as if the dead coyote can give meaning to his miserable excuse for being the hunter luring others into the sub-zero temps with him.
I stand with you on this Cherylynn...........thanks for checking in...Rick
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