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Hunter Al Morris Explains Predator Control for Game Management

Day 4: How to Find Coyotes to Hunt

Editor’s Note: By harvesting coyotes, foxes, bobcats, raccoons and possums, you can have more deer, turkeys, quail, pheasants, squirrels and rabbits on your hunting property. We all know the advantage of planting supplemental food plots, fruit trees, nut trees and shrubs for wildlife. We also selectively harvest our deer herds and provide minerals for deer and turkey. But one important component of managing your lands for more wildlife is reducing the number of predators on the properties. Al Morris, the host of “FOXPRO Furtakers” (http://outdoorchannel.com) on the Outdoor Channel, will tell us how and why harvesting predators will increase the number of game animals and songbirds on the lands you hunt. Morris, who lives in Springville, Utah, has been a predator hunter for 30+ years. Morris and his partner, Garvin Young, are the only hunters who have won the World Predator Calling Championship three times. Morris says, “I really like all the Mossy Oak patterns, since they suit all types of terrain, and I hunt all over the United States. When I’m hunting west of the Mississippi River, Mossy Oak Brush ( http://www.mossyoak.com) is my favorite. In the Midwest and most of the East, I prefer Mossy Oak Break-Up Infinity (http://www.mossyoak.com).”

Click for Larger ViewThe best way to find coyotes is to actually see them on the property you hunt. Another way to locate coyotes is with trail cameras. The next-best way to find coyotes, bobcats, coons and possums is to pinpoint tracks and scat. If you don’t know what a predator’s track looks like, you can get another hunter to identify the tracks for you, purchase an inexpensive field guide, go on the Internet and look-up animal tracks or ask your county agent to point you in the right direction to learn what animal tracks look like. Then, when you’re out hunting, you can search for the tracks, determine what predators you have on the property you hunt and start calling them.

Click for Larger ViewYou can howl to coyotes at night, and they’ll howl back to you. Then you can identify their locations by their howling. You can’t use this technique on foxes, bobcats, coons or possums, because they usually won’t answer a call at night. To find these predators, look for the places with the most predator tracks and scat, and take a stand there. Always be conscious of the fact that you have to call into the wind, so predators can’t smell you as they come to the call.

Click for Larger ViewHave you ever noticed, when you hear a siren, you’ll usually hear dogs howling in backyards at the same time. Coyotes react the same way to a high-pitched siren sound. Using a coyote-howling sound will get coyotes to howl back to you. I’m amazed at the different types of howls I’ve been able to identify as I’ve hunted coyotes all over the country. For instance, the coyotes in the South often sound like wolves. They have big, deep, throaty howls and loud voices. Regardless of the section of the country, I still can make coyotes howl at night to locate them. Usually, if I go out for three consecutive nights, I can identify the individual howls of each coyote, just like a coon hunter can identify each of his dogs by its bark. In three nights of scouting, you usually can identify which farms have the most coyotes, and where the coyotes spend most of their time.

Click for Larger ViewWhat the viewers don’t see on “FOXPRO Furtakers” TV is that we spend 3 days and nights scouting every place we hunt. We also have to scout for a location to call from where the cameraman can see the predator coming in, the hunter on the stand and the hunter taking the shot. If you’re calling predators to increase the wildlife on the property you hunt, you may be able to pick better locations, since you’re not planning on shooting a video of the hunt. Remember, when you hunt predators, you’re protecting the deer and turkeys on the lands you hunt.

To learn more about hunting and fishing, see John E. Phillips’ eBooks and print books at www.amazon.com and www.barnesandnoble.com.

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About the Author

John Phillips, winner of the 2012 Homer Circle Fishing Award for outstanding fishing writer by the American Sportfishing Association (ASA) and the Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA), the 2008 Crossbow Communicator of the year and the 2007 Legendary Communicator chosen for induction into the National Fresh Water Hall of Fame, is a freelance writer (over 6,000 magazine articles for about 100 magazines and several thousand newspaper columns published), magazine editor, photographer for print media as well as industry catalogues (over 25,000 photos published), lecturer, outdoor consultant, marketing consultant, book author and daily internet content provider with an overview of the outdoors. Click here for more information and a list of all the books available from John E. Phillips.

Tomorrow: When’s the Best Time to Hunt Predators


Check back each day this week for more about Hunter Al Morris Explains Predator Control for Game Management

Day 1: How Al Morris Decides Which Call to Use to Take Predators
Day 2: How to Set-Up Right to Take More Predators
Day 3: How Much Land Do You Need for Taking Predators
Day 4: How to Find Coyotes to Hunt
Day 5: When’s the Best Time to Hunt Predators

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Entry 859, Day 4