Maybe in an urban area that might be. In rural areas, you won’t have a dog for very long.I think it would extremely unlikely that even a pack of coyotes would risk taking on a 50+lb dog. It is creepy as **** when a pack of them is yelping in the dark though.
Really? Are there that many incidents of coyotes attacking or killing large dogs? I've heard of plenty of small dogs getting grabbed.Maybe in an urban area that might be. In rural areas, you won’t have a dog for very long.
I'm not sure what the odds are of your children being taken away or mauled by a coyote ... but its got to be aligned with winning Powerball or MegaMillons.
Target is their natural habitat.I'm familiar with urban cougars
Holy ****:1981, three year old in California was the last recorded incident. So, yeah, not impossible but damn improbable.
I know a guy who lost a German Short Hair hunting dog to a lone coyote. The DNR person up here told me to kill the coyote because she was tired of the calls about it. He stood in his yard and saw his dog disappear. 35-40 pound dog.Really? Are there that many incidents of coyotes attacking or killing large dogs? I've heard of plenty of small dogs getting grabbed.
Wow, that's surprising to me. That's a crazy aggressive coyote.I know a guy who lost a German Short Hair hunting dog to a lone coyote. The DNR person up here told me to kill the coyote because she was tired of the calls about it. He stood in his yard and saw his dog disappear. 35-40 pound dog.
Had a guy ask me if he could hunt a farm for them. He showed me his night vision kill of one 400 yards out.Not only year round, but you can use trucks, cb radios, and higher powered rifles to hunt them. You aren't supposed to spotlight them but you can use night vision gear. The state is fine with you killing as many as you want.
Been a few mountain lions in NC Iowa. If they made it here, they could make southern Iowa.I heard yesterday from a neighbor that a mountain lion has recently been spotted here in the Laplands.
What do you call an urban myth when it's out in the country?
As for coyotes, yes, we have tons. They have chased the dog, stalked baby pigs in the pasture (super clever strategy, too, working in pairs and running the momma ragged until she slipped up and lost track of one...), and we once saw one catch a chicken in the yard in broad daylight.
I'm familiar with urban cougars around WDM, never seen an urban coyote.
Been a few mountain lions in NC Iowa. If they made it here, they could make southern Iowa.
Iowa is their "natural habitat"...I feel sorry for these critters. They didn't ask to be crowded out by humans from their natural habitats.
Iowa is their "natural habitat"...
TIL NC Iowa and Southern Iowa are considered "urban".Before there were "urban areas".