Yander
Veteran Member
I remember the first coyote I saw as a kid running across a field with about 12 guys shooting at it. It got away. I was amazed at how fast it was. I was used to seeing fox but it was my first coyote I had seen.
No, neither does females in season coming up the rear in pursuit of males but it isn't important.Originally, I thought he meant he shot 5 alpha coyotes at one sitting.
What he said is that he shot 1 alpha coyote, then days (don't know how many)later another, and so on. As the pack replaced alphas, he shot them.
Make sense?
I was sitting on a log while deer hunting one day when a coyote came into sight. My rifle was in my lap pointed left, my revolver was on my left hip. The wind was blowing right so that dog came within 12 feet of me before sensing something was out of place. It was an awkward shot, bringing the rifle up and twisting as the animal was quartering away to my right. I never got a chance to pull the trigger.If you see how fast they light those afterburners when the first shot goes off, then you would know why one is not shooting more than 2 in a string. Not unless there are 10 people shooting... and in my case I never saw a group bigger than 2 in the day either. Usually the Alpha male with the Alpha female or just a second male. My double was 2 males. Shot the leading dog, second took off but made the fatal error to stop and look back to see what became of the boss.
Coyotes often outrun bullets across a field (depending on who is firing them)I remember the first coyote I saw as a kid running across a field with about 12 guys shooting at it. It got away. I was amazed at how fast it was. I was used to seeing fox but it was my first coyote I had seen.