I've caught them here on about every kind of bedding you can think of. Peat moss, buckwheat hulls, dry salted dirt, waxed dirt, dried cow manure, chopped hay, and for many years I bought bags of various hull type mulch from menards like cocoa bean hulls, coffee bean hulls, and even finely chopped cedar and Cyprus mulch. Cocoa beans smell like chocolate...but didnt seem to phase coyotes. Neither did coffee beans, mulch, or peat. They all work just fine.
Our winters get super cold here and freeze/thaw is an issue 99% of the season so I have to buy it well ahead if time like in spring or so and completely dry the bale out in my garage all summer and fall. Peat takes me a long time to get it bone dry even in a hot garage all summer. That's stirring it daily too. Otherwise the stuff I was buying would freeze up like a rock if there was any moisture in it whatsoever.
Completely dried peat is almost powdery fine, light, hard to bed solidly in and works for a few frosty nights here but eventually it too crusts over and I have to maintain sets with fresh dry stuff or else am dancing on sets myself to try to fire them.
I've gone to using well waxed and sifted dirt for bedding and then using peat or finely chopped straw for blending. So far it's been my best freeze proof and longest lasting combination I can put at a set and still have any confidence it will fire after a few days of freeze/thaw night and day after day in late december work.
Jim
Last edited by jabNE; 11/13/19 06:41 AM.