T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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652.1 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Unless they do it again. | Wed May 02 1990 17:02 | 4 |
| I saw coyotes on Quabbin several years ago. It wouldn't surprise
me if they were much closer to Boston now, either in pure form
or cross-bred with wild dogs. (Remember, they live within the city
limits of Hollywood!)
|
652.2 | MA huntin' reg's review, from the abstracts... | BOSTON::HICKS | OOPS!! Oh-oh... | Wed May 02 1990 23:41 | 15 |
| The folks at MA F&G are happy to talk if you've got intelligent
questions, and I think they still investigate coyote predation.
From a recent conversation I had with them I'd be surprised if there
weren't coyotes everywhere up to rt 128! You can shoot 'em with a
centerfire, just NOT during deer season. The exception is Barnstable,
Bristol (where I live... sob!), Dukes (Mathas Vinyad), Plymouth
and Nantucket counties, where they're taboo from Nov. 1 thru March 31.
Covers coyote season nicely (grrrrrrr!). Buckshot and slugs are
illegal ANYTIME of year, except deer season, of course, so if you're in
the cursed southeast counties, its #2 lead birdshot. Or a pistol. If
you can get a LTC, of course! (Boy, ain't it fun to be a gun nut and
hunter in Dukesland?)
<<< t >>>
|
652.3 | | WJOUSM::PAPPALARDO | | Thu May 03 1990 13:12 | 13 |
|
Coyotes are just about in every town and county in Mass. Last weeks
local paper had a write up of one killed by a car in Haverhill which is
off of Rt; 495 as you head towards the beach.
The question to ask is which area's do not have a coyote.
They are resillent !
Rick
|
652.4 | yotes | SHARE::ROSENLUND | | Fri May 04 1990 00:17 | 15 |
| I have been calling/hunting coyotes for better than ten years,and
hunting them here in Mass. since the season opened a few years ago.They
are pretty well established throughout the state.I work in Hudson and
have seen them on several occassions here in town.Once at the end of
290 where the extension meets I saw a pair,and a couple of times I've
seen them in the old orchard behind hlo_1.I've been successful calling
them in both Northboro and Berlin/Boylston but due most of my calling
north and west of Worcester.I also due nuisance wildlife control or the
central district,and have done this for 20 some odd years.It would be
highly unusual for coyotes to tear open the cages/barn as you stated.
It was more likely domestic dogs.The markings you mentioned occur as
well as others.The eastern states coyote has a variety of color phases
from red to blond,brown blackish ...etc. Ron R.
|
652.5 | Handsome critters | AKOFIN::ANDERSSON | | Fri Aug 24 1990 10:09 | 4 |
| The coyotes I've seen in Maine are handsome critters. Not rangey
or mangey looking. They're full bodied - combination grey, white and
some black and maybe brown. The first face I saw reminded me of a
husky. Very pretty.
|
652.6 | | WAYBAK::LEFEBVRE | Straight, no chaser | Fri Nov 02 1990 12:53 | 4 |
| Saw a good size coyote carcass on the side of 495 in Amesbury MA, this
morning.
Mark.
|
652.7 | mass is out | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Wed Jan 02 1991 11:34 | 11 |
| mass laws are screwed up...
you can hunt yotes with a rifle but have to use a shotgun for deer...
I don't get it...
you can't check in one unless you give the FWS a skull, and a
taxidermist won't touch it till it's tagged. Sooooo what do you do???
guess you have to learn how to cape out a head in a hurry...
Fra
|
652.8 | flash alert fresh off the presses | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Mon Jan 07 1991 15:50 | 32 |
| Tom Decker, the head honcho for the furbearing dept of the FWS here in
Ma, just returned my phone call concerning the checking in process (or
should I say the lack of one) for coyotes. last year there were 95
Yotes checked in with the FWS and only 3 of them were going to be
mounted... so evidently it isn't a problem as of yet...
What he told me was that upon shooting a Yote you are to have it
tagged, (carcass intact should you not know how to skin it out) and
they will attach the tag through the nose of the animal. You can now
bring the carcass to the taxidermist to have it caped out. After the
taxidermist is done caping out the face he can contact you to pick up
the skull to be turned into the FWS (within 30 days) to satisfy their
requirements. BTW, a taxidermist cannot work on any animal not tagged,
this according to Tom Decker. He was going to call all the offices to
spread the word regarding this new info.
Evidently when I went down they didn't know this was the process or
have come up with something really quickly since Tom Deckers
return from his vacation. I talked with another guy from Westboro
concerning the lack of a process and was told that the taxidermist did
not have to have the animal tagged before working on it... and that
depending on whether or not the checking station felt like it they
would tag the animal and allow you to return the skull... basically he
was full of horseshit. Can't recall the guys name (too bad) he was
really snide and obviously was less informed than I was, scarey ain't
it ;^)
So there you have it, shoot them and have it tagged through the
nostril, you then have 30 days to return the skull, and the taxidermist
can now do the work.
Fra
|
652.9 | nice wall mount | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Thu May 30 1991 13:34 | 5 |
| I just recieved the Coyote rug/head. looks great, the taxidermist (Bill
Thompson, Fitchburg, MA 345-6556) did a terrific job mounting it,
considering he had an exit hole the size of a large grapefruit.
Fra
|
652.10 | coyotes | STRATA::BING | The Brady bill is a joke | Tue Jun 11 1991 15:22 | 8 |
|
A friend of mine ran into a coyote while walking through the woods of
Rutland, MA this past weekend. Seems he jumped it and it ran about
25-30 yards and stopped looked at my friend and started to circle him.
Dont know why, maybe trying to wind him? He said the coyote looked
mangy and in poor health. i also saw a dead one out on 495 this past sat.
Walt
|
652.11 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Electric Ecstasy | Tue Jun 11 1991 15:47 | 3 |
| >He said the coyote looked mangy and in poor health.
I wonder if it was just losing its winter coat.
|
652.12 | Mange prevelant in Mass... | TARKIN::AHO | Skeet addict... | Fri Jun 14 1991 09:30 | 13 |
|
Chris Thurlow had told us at a recent Sportsmen's Club meeting
that MANGE is prevelant this year especially dur to the mild
winter we had this past year and due to the numbers of animals
that survived it... He also said that we should start seeing
RABIES starting from Western Mass and moving toward the EAST...
Let's be carefull out there,
~Mike~
|
652.13 | | CARROL::LEFEBVRE | Aspiring Fender Bender | Mon Jun 17 1991 09:14 | 5 |
| Yesterday, I saw a BIG coyote on I-95 north near the Taylor River in
Hampton Falls. It was fully intact laying on the median. Looked to me
that it weighed about 45 pounds, but it could have been bloated.
Mark.
|
652.14 | Enough to get you scared... | JUPITR::BJUBINVILLE | EXIT: LIGHT ENTER: NIGHT | Thu Nov 21 1991 04:00 | 19 |
| I have a good story to tell. I went bow hunting Wed. morning
in my favorite town to hunt. My buddy couldn't go so I went by myself.
It was about 4:45am and the moon barely lit the ground. I was into
the woods about 50 yards when I heard a branch break. I turned around
with my flashlight and scanned back and forth but I didn't see
anything. I turned around and started walking again when I heard
two coyotes in separate location ahead of me starting to howl.
Then another branch in back of me breaks. I turned around and saw
the reflecting eyes of a coy-dog looking right at me. I proceeded
to piss my pants as I stuck the flashlight in my mouth and grabbed
an arrow. At this point the coyote took off into the woods. Being
by myself I decided not to go into the woods. I started heading back
when I heard something running in my direction. I got ready a shot
when the coyote ran about 60 yards away through the laurel. I got
the hell out of there as fast as I could. I'm going back next week
during my week off and I'm going to plug one of those damn things
with lead!!!
BJ
|
652.15 | | WEDOIT::ROBERTS | Steel wheels & wheel Guns | Thu Nov 21 1991 08:14 | 9 |
|
The question I have is, were you using a scent to confuse these
critters?
It sounds like maybe they couldn't fiqure you out or they would
have scattered real quick.
Gary
|
652.16 | Not trying to horn in on your spot.. | EMDS::PETERSON | | Thu Nov 21 1991 08:53 | 5 |
|
re.14
what town was this in??
|
652.17 | | JUPITR::BJUBINVILLE | EXIT: LIGHT ENTER: NIGHT | Fri Nov 22 1991 03:08 | 6 |
| ohhhh re-1 I can't tell you that.. that would take the fun out of it.
Zone 8 is the general region. I had fox piss and I this some Doe
2000 on. I'm going to plung them on Monday....
BJ
|
652.18 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | I was awakened by the dream | Fri Nov 22 1991 10:49 | 16 |
| Chuck-
The place I hunt has so many 'yotes that the farmer sez he's seen 'em peeking
into the house on cold winter eves! He just popped one of two that were munching
on a dead calf a week or two ago. (His mother sits in the house and "has nothing
better to do than look out the window and call me when she sees coyotes.")
The place is loaded with coyote scat. They dumped a pile of turkey parts out in
the back last sunday. I can only imagine what a wild scene ensued as darkness
fell.
This is in NH, BTW. Coyotes are practically at epidemic proportions. If you
want to find coyotes, go to your favorite deer woods. They are almost certainly
in there.
The Doctah
|
652.19 | Eastern Coyote ain't a coy-dog | AKOFIN::ANDERSSON | | Tue Dec 03 1991 14:34 | 15 |
| RE .14
Which were they - coy-dogs or coyotes? They ain't the same.
Coy-dogs are a hybrid product of coyotes and domestic dogs which
cannot propagate, while the Eastern Coyote is a strain which came to be
in the North-Central part of the country. They're a cross between the
Western coyote and the wolf - bigger than one and smaller than the
other. They are now pure-bred (?) and propagate like crazy (up to
16 per litter when food is good.)
(This according to a study released by Mass. Wildlife group.)
Andy
|
652.20 | ex | KNGBUD::LAFOSSE | | Tue Dec 03 1991 15:45 | 16 |
| According to Paul Resendez, resident coyote expert working for the MDC,
there is no such thing as a Coydog. Not sure of the biological
jibberish, but it has to due with breeding it out of existence and it
being a one time thing etc.. etc.. Maybe Doug Bonin can elaborate more
on this... the details seem to have escaped my brain cells for the
moment. ;^)
The eastern coyote however is a cross between the smaller western
coyote and timber wolves as the "herd" made it's way east. This would
account for it's larger size.
If any of you get a chance, and have some interest in coyotes, I'd
recommend attending one of Resendezs' lectures... very informative
and interesting... there is a slide presentation while he speaks.
Fra
|
652.21 | | ZENDIA::BONIN | ULTRIX Security Standard | Tue Dec 03 1991 16:20 | 3 |
| Fra, the coydog myth is discussed in 317.11.
Doug
|