- Nov 17, 2010
- 341
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I live on a farm that has been one since the 1700's. The coyotes have been here a lot longer than I have. It's their home and I don't want them killed. So I protect my chickens and lock them up at night.
Every morning I walk my dogs, two goldens, in our woods and we have perhaps a dozen times met a coyote, usually a single, one time four of them. Most alarming was a coyote that barked and followed us for quite a ways. Stranger still was that my dog, who chases coyotes out of the horse pasture, just trotted next to me without a word.
I guess the coyote finally got too close and my dog turned in an instant and chased her over the stone wall that borders our property with the next. Since that wall is as far as my dogs are allowed to go, she turned and came back to me. Then the coyote followed us for another couple hundred feet, but stayed on her side of the wall, barking. Perhaps she had puppies.
But whatever that coyote was barking about, my dog understood. She didn't try and kill the coyote, she just claimed her personal space, her territory and then we moved on. So that is what I do. I protect my yard, my pasture, my chicken coop, the rest they can have as nature intended it.
Every morning I walk my dogs, two goldens, in our woods and we have perhaps a dozen times met a coyote, usually a single, one time four of them. Most alarming was a coyote that barked and followed us for quite a ways. Stranger still was that my dog, who chases coyotes out of the horse pasture, just trotted next to me without a word.
I guess the coyote finally got too close and my dog turned in an instant and chased her over the stone wall that borders our property with the next. Since that wall is as far as my dogs are allowed to go, she turned and came back to me. Then the coyote followed us for another couple hundred feet, but stayed on her side of the wall, barking. Perhaps she had puppies.
But whatever that coyote was barking about, my dog understood. She didn't try and kill the coyote, she just claimed her personal space, her territory and then we moved on. So that is what I do. I protect my yard, my pasture, my chicken coop, the rest they can have as nature intended it.