Logan_Lamothe
Regular
- Location
- Big River, Sask
Don't think so, but I can't find it in the regs right now.
I sent an email to sask environment, when they reply I will post it.
Don't think so, but I can't find it in the regs right now.
If they put a bounty on them in NS I hope its open to the public and not just "trappers". The the scientists and even the NS Federation of Hunters and Anglers claim the coyotes wont be scared or learn any fear of man by us shooting their pack members.......bull crap imo.
Traping them in snairs in the woods is what wont make them fear man- the pack sees a family member dying to some odd bit of metal. If the people who are being attacked, ie if the "meat" fights back, THEN the coyotes may just fear their prey. They will see their fellow family members being harmed by their intended targets. They will witness the consequences of their actions in a cause-and-effect way. Also, this would target only the problem animals as only the attacking coyotes would be targeted not the countless thousands in the woods bothering no one. The Trappers Association of NS can kiss my bottom for asking to make any bounty -exclusive- to them!
The principal advantage of trapping is that a snare is a 24 hour a day, 7 day a week hunter. You could not hope to make the same impact on the coyote population by hunting that trapping could, especially in terrain typical of Eastern Canada.
If you are trying to lower coyote populations in NS then I absolutely agree with you.
Most agree that lowering the coyote populatoin is not an answer, however, as the females simply have several times more young to compensate.
Probably was someone's dog and she thought it was a coyote. Everyone has jumped on the coyote hysteria ever since that report of the girl in Cape Breton. Every encounter now is an attack. Lady in Saint John had her lap dog attacked by a yote and she grabbed the yote, they called it an attack as well. The only attack I could see was on the poor coyote
We have yotes all around here, lose the odd cat but that doesn't hurt my feelings any. The kids still play out in the woods and fields but yotes are about the last thing I worry about. Country yotes still respect the heirarcy, all the brazen ones around here are dead.
now this guy knows how to handle a coyote problem!
If i shot a yote and let it hang on the barbwire behind the barn, the canine UFC matches would immediately cease. Needed a fresh yote to hang on the wire every 6-12 months to stay effective, but it worked.
when the N.S. gov will let us hunt with a rifle year round it will make hunting coyotes a lot easier...



























