coyote attack in Cape Breton

coyote attack in cape breton

if they get too close to your home and you don't want the neighbours to hear use a CB Cap to the head. your neighbours won't hear and the coyote will be toast. and if it yelps and the neighbours show up say holey cow I just saw this coyote get clipped by a car and the car just kept going.

oh well time to get the shovel out.:D
 
Coyotes killed in Bedford

After multiple complaints from schools and people in the area, the Natural Re*sources Department sent trappers to the area recently to control the situation.
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/metro/71248-coyotes-killed-bedford>
Coyotes killed in Bedford

March 8, 2012 - 6:38am By LAURA WARREN


People living near Paper Mill Lake can breathe a little easier knowing that three coyotes have been removed from their Bedford neighbourhood.

After multiple complaints from schools and people in the area, the Natural Re*sources Department sent trappers to the area recently to control the situation.

A path off of Lake Road that surrounds the lake was closed because coyote traps were placed throughout the area.

“There were two coyotes that were shot just back here and we weren’t able to go in there for over two weeks," Moira Cot*tam, who lives near the trail, said Wednes*day. “They (trappers) came and we couldn’t walk through. They had signs at both ends and it was well advertised."

Cottam said she hasn’t seen any coyotes around but knows of people who did.

Mike Boudreau, a natural resources wildlife biologist, said the coyotes were caught over a period of a few weeks. He said they were shot on site with a small*calibre rifle after they were trapped.

The traps are painless to ensure no harm to pets and it is nearly impossible for an animal to escape without a trap*per’s aid, he said.

“Any time you have wildlife that ends up being habituated to people, either through feeding or just in association, there’s a risk of having an aggressive encounter," Boudreau said.

“What we’re trying to do is educate people that when they do recognize that they have them around their properties that they do certain things."

Among those things is not leaving food outside, he said. In addition, people should not to go near them if they do see them and if they do see them, they should call the department.

(lwarren@herald.ca)


<http://thechronicleherald.ca/metro/71248-coyotes-killed-bedford>
 
I have a contact at the C.B. Highland park, I was shown exactly where the attack happened and the gruesome details, which I will not share. She was a small woman and didn't have much of a chance.

We did go for a walk on the trail, which is astoundingly beautiful. As guns are still not allowed in the park, we both carried pretty stout sticks. Never saw a coyote, but saw 3 moose! One was maybe 25 yards away, so much so that my contact looked at me and said "do you know what to do if a moose charges?"

I've read that when coyotes encounter a new animal, they have "steps" in which they "test" the animal. Because people either are neutral or start cooying and taking pictures, coyotes learn that humans are slow, docile animals that are probably good eating...
 
I seen a couple yotes in the field across from my house the other day.
The season opens Oct 1st here :(

Here where I live they can be hunted year round with a small games license. In some areas they have become quite a nuisance.

I see them often in the fields here around Essex county (south western Ontario). A few weeks back a family friend had one come into the back yard when his grand kids were out playing. It grabbed the hem of the grand daughter's dress and was trying to pull her down. Luckily her father had a .22 handy and was able to kill it before any of the kids where hurt or worse. The MNR was called and they came out and took the coyote to do some testing.
 
The people in charge of our hunting regulations are pretty out of touch around here. Par for the course Re: anything to do with the PEI government.
 
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