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coyottes moving in
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<blockquote data-quote="Bama" data-source="post: 199495" data-attributes="member: 1184"><p>Where I live coyotes ain't a problem until the mice and other small critters are consumed. If the yote population is beyond carrying capacity of the land - then we have problems. Eastern coyotes sometimes hunt in packs and will kill young calves if the opportunity presents itself. After a year of overpopulated yotes things will settle back down and you won't have to worry about them for a few years. I've saw them in cattle herds and the cattle didn't even pay any attention. At other times I have saw a pack of them around a cow giving brith. She would be up and a couple of them would be attacking her head while some others would be going for the dangling calf. Cow will be doing a spinning motion in order to protect her calf until she is just to tired to defend herself or calf.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bama, post: 199495, member: 1184"] Where I live coyotes ain't a problem until the mice and other small critters are consumed. If the yote population is beyond carrying capacity of the land - then we have problems. Eastern coyotes sometimes hunt in packs and will kill young calves if the opportunity presents itself. After a year of overpopulated yotes things will settle back down and you won't have to worry about them for a few years. I've saw them in cattle herds and the cattle didn't even pay any attention. At other times I have saw a pack of them around a cow giving brith. She would be up and a couple of them would be attacking her head while some others would be going for the dangling calf. Cow will be doing a spinning motion in order to protect her calf until she is just to tired to defend herself or calf. [/QUOTE]
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