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<blockquote data-quote="CattleMan1920" data-source="post: 1580114" data-attributes="member: 37967"><p>Totally agree Grit. I had a neighbor who is no longer living, great guy, but he would drag every dead animal down to a corner where our properties meet, I guess he didn't think it was an issue. It sounded like Call of the Wild at night after he would take one down, coyotes howling like crazy, and vultures working on it by day. </p><p></p><p>Like I said, he's passed on, and that practice is over, and guess what, the coyotes have mostly moved on to other opportunities and same with the vultures, but it took a while. A licensed trapper worked a couple of years to thin out the coyotes, which were numerous beyond compare. I once spotted a coyote up on a bluff and it was watching a cow have her calf, I didn't have the chance to get some positive reinforcement out in time before it ran off, but that was too close for comfort.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="CattleMan1920, post: 1580114, member: 37967"] Totally agree Grit. I had a neighbor who is no longer living, great guy, but he would drag every dead animal down to a corner where our properties meet, I guess he didn't think it was an issue. It sounded like Call of the Wild at night after he would take one down, coyotes howling like crazy, and vultures working on it by day. Like I said, he's passed on, and that practice is over, and guess what, the coyotes have mostly moved on to other opportunities and same with the vultures, but it took a while. A licensed trapper worked a couple of years to thin out the coyotes, which were numerous beyond compare. I once spotted a coyote up on a bluff and it was watching a cow have her calf, I didn't have the chance to get some positive reinforcement out in time before it ran off, but that was too close for comfort. [/QUOTE]
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