dogs vs coyotes...?
We just moved into Alhambra 3 weeks ago. Twice in the late evening we have heard what sounds like a pack of dogs or coyotes howling and barking. I know there are coyote around but has anyone actually seen any coyote or wolves in Alhambra or specifically knows of such, not just speculation but has actual knowledge of them being there?
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Thanks. Hearing them in a pack like that is scary. Not just one but multiples!
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This could keep someone up for a while.
Coyote Pack Howl - YouTube Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk |
Wow, ok it did NOT sound like that lol. But it was a howl and a bunch of multiple animals barking. I think if I heard what is in that video without seeing anything I would assume a smaller animal was being attacked!
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The last official report I saw was in the Village of Tall Trees, that's just behind Bob Evans on 466. A very busy and congested area, and yet two small dogs were snatched by Coyotes. One in broad daylight from the front yard while the owner stood just feet away. The one lesson learned is, don't let your dog off a leash.
Don't think you're safe in a CYV, just last month my neighbor was on a ladder trimming his Sylvester Palm when he saw two eyes starring back at him. He thought, they're awful big for a tree rat. Then the animal fell down and it was a huge Bobcat. The man came down the ladder and the cat was up against the wall and couldn't get out except to go by the man. Instead, he went right over the 7' wall. We cannot put links on this site to Villages News, here'a google link and it's the top or first result the villages dog taken by coyote village of tall trees - Google Search Here's a photo of a Bobcat walking along the top of a villa wall in the Village of Hillsborough. This photo and a story are also in Villages News, which we cannot link. https://scontent-mia3-1.xx.fbcdn.net...93&oe=5E3F6457 |
A handful of years ago a man took his small dog outside (in their yard) before going to bed. A coyote came and snatched the dog and ran with it. We live between Hemingway and Mallory CC---have seen one running at dusk. Also, in the middle of the night heard (neighbors told us their security camera caught them) some barking and running between the houses.
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I do not recall hearing them here in TV, but I know they are around... |
Coyotes are here. They are smart. They are survivors.
I remember reading, a few years ago, about at least two incidents of coyotes getting dogs in TV. Both times, it seemed to me, as if the coyote had observed a pattern of what time the dog would be vulnerable. ( just my theory, derived from the stories as reported) One report was of a small dog let outside, just before coming back in for bedtime, might even have been on a leash, but always at about the same time. The other was about two small dogs always let out in the morning, in a backyard, for just a few minutes. Coyotes are cousins to domestic dogs. Anyone who has a dog as a house pet knows that our dogs always seem to know what time it is: Time for food. Time to take their doggie pills. Our ETA when we were on a work schedule. (One of our dogs had her opinion on what time company should go home. She would go to the guests, glare at them, and then flounce back the hall to the bedrooms, only to return to do the same thing again and again.) Then there are the working dogs who always know what time to go bring in the sheep or the cattle. Coyotes seem to have a sense of time, too, just like their cousins, our dogs, who live with us. Coyote mating season is approaching which makes all wild animals more brazen — running wilder and hungrier than usual and then some with families to feed later. (Deer are hit more often during mating season because they often are running, single-minded, with no sense, just one goal, and then BAM goes a Buick. I also remember at the time of these reports of losing dogs to coyotes in TV, TOTV had a couple of posters who were Wannabe Dead-Eye-Dicks. They posted cringeworthy threats, nutty visions of shooting coyotes in the streets. Oh, yeah, TV, with houses on top of houses, people everywhere. Duh. It never happened that I heard of, just a lot of ridiculous talk, probably brand-new gun owners with itchy trigger fingers and absolutely no clue. Scary and amusing at the same time. Anyway, if you want to know more about coyotes, Google ‘coyotes and Florida’ and you can learn a lot about how to co-exist with them. Coyotes are here to stay. |
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What street in Lynnhaven.
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With an ever shrinking habitat, due to development, the coyotes will find another way to survive and feed themselves and their young..
They have been around a long time, and adapted to change, just the same as us humans. Unlike us though, they do not destroy habitats, lay waste vast tracts of land, dump millions of tons of waste, or worry about VIP seats at the squares. All they need is a food source and somehere warm and dry to live, and just be a Coyote. If the cost of their survival is the odd dog or cat, I am good with that. |
There are lots of coyotes in the area, as well as fox and bobcats. Have seen both foxes and bobcats in our yard and also seen coyotes where we walk our border collie in the Rio Grand area. Coyotes come out of their dens around dusk and hunt at night. When the parents let the pups out to begin the nights hunt they usually yelp a lot because they are so excited for what is play time to them. When the pack of yotes gets a kill, they yelp very loudly in celebration of their success in gathering a good meal.
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10 Fascinating Facts About Urban Coyotes – Urban Coyote Initiative, LLC Sent from my SM-N960U using Tapatalk |
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