I have noticed that coyotes seem to shy away from hogs here in Central Texas. But they love deer and jackrabbits. Different dogs with different tastes.
The point is to take what Tejas is doing and see if it might work in your area. Maybe different animal at the bait sight. Maybe smaller, maybe bigger bait pile. Adjust it to your trapping area and your target species. It is similar to way the Canadians have been doing for years with snares around bait sights. Tejas adapted it and made it work in South Texas.
Remember that this is control work, not fur trapping. This is population reduction so his livestock and wildlife has a chance survive. In South Texas, if you don’t control the coyotes, your livestock and wildlife will suffer in a big way.
I applaud Tejas for putting this information out so we can all learn from it. Thanks Tejas!
Here's a trapper that gets it !If this didn’t work extremely well I wouldn’t bother with it.
Any method that ups the catch numbers the way this does is an effective tool I will take advantage of.
You don’t see trappers passing up a dead cow in a pasture. Why? Because it is an effective means of catching more coyotes.
An established bone yard on a ranch or feedlot is targeted for the same exact reason.
It’s probably a safe bet to say most working ranches have a dead pit. The bait station is just a bone yard where the coyotes can’t haul off with the goods.
Some might think that pulling in coyotes to the area would have a negative impact the deer herd.
Deer mortality is extremely low at this time of year around here. They are in top shape and it shows. Fawns of the year can easily elude Wile E. Coyotes pose no real threat to a healthy deer in peak condition.
The only time coyotes are a serious concern is when the herd is vulnerable. Fawn drop, fighting injuries, and/or post rut rundown are when we see the most mayhem.