Predator Hunting > Night Hunting

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Misterjake23:
So true Hern.  The more fox and coyote hunter there are, the smarter they get.  There is more and more pressure in the wood compared to just a few years ago.  There aren't to many coyotes now that haven't been educated !!

QUATTRO:
I am not as experienced as Jake and Hern but one thing I have learned is there is no replacement for scouting and learning what areas are worth putting the time into and which ones aren't.. and also learning when to hunt certain spots. Some hold at different times. So much time can be spent in areas that simply do not have a worth while amount...and that can add to your dry spell. I know I was so eager to hunt and get that first coyote that I would call just about anywhere..Problem was I was calling to nothing..I'd rather have 5 good coyote spots as opposed to 50 that have nothing. Once you are confident you have good areas then all the other work begins. There is never a guarantee even when you know they are around. That being said, it will happen for you if you stick with it.

so-soshot:
Scuttle904 I have been calling coyote 11-12 years now hoked up with a buddy 6 years ago, this season alone have made 46 stands that"s from SEPT to now still have MARCH and some of APRIL yet I do keep record of all my sets time, place,callin,kills,missed shot,sound,response no show,location, Misterjake and Hern some it the same from me just keep after them it will happen. This time of year is harder been called to all winter I use very little calling and lots of quiet scanning 2-3 howls to start 15min or so then maybe barkhowls or yodelhowl quiet 15-20min I always end with pup or yote distress over 60% of time they come in after 30min time all of my sets are 45-60min long just what been working for me.

Misterjake23:
Quattro,   So true when you said about scouting.  As we all know a coyote isn't always in the same spot all the time.  Most run a 2-3 week cycle from what I've seen.  Unless you do your home work,  like you said,  you'll be calling to nothing.  You can't call in what's not there.

Hern:
Scuttle904, are you still with us?
I agree with the above suggestions, scouting and keeping to the basics.
I will suggest finding more hunting spots.

One thing that doesn't seem basic to most folks is covering more territory.
Years ago, I did an un-official survey (for my own research) on how far a predator hunter, hunts from his house. The answer was 10-15 miles from home.
Pretty much parts of 2 or 3 townships.
Here's an example of a small territory and larger territory...
How many Coyote are in those overlapping townships? Lets say there are 6-8 Coyotes in that hunt area you are calling and working on near home.
If you increase your hunting territory by 5 times the distance traveled from home, you are now working on 30-40 Coyotes.
Yes, you must get more permission, you have to travel, you have to do more scouting.
It's simple math. More territory equals more Coyotes encountered.
Same applies to Fox & Coon.

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