The Budget Bird – Decoys Don’t Need to Cost a Fortune to be Effective
This predator hunting decoy cured my brother’s “hang-up” problems with open prairie coyotes near Boise Idaho and didn’t break his budget.
Has the $30, $40, and sometimes $100 price tag kept you from calling with decoys on your predator stands? Here’s a how-to guide on building an effective visual enticement, with wind powered motion, for all types of predators, and it can be done on the cheap. We’ve included a complete parts list on this post.
The Budget Bird Decoy w/ Goose Feather Attractor
Like most do-it-yourself projects, the Budget Bird idea started as a solution to a problem. My brother, Mike Healy, lives near Boise, Idaho and likes to hit a few coyote stands in the afternoon near his home. Most of the area around Boise is rolling grass prairie covered with lava rock, grass, and short/small stands of sage brush. There is plenty of hunting pressure and there are plenty of predator callers in Boise.
There were lots of coyotes everywhere he went, and he wasn’t having any problems getting the coyotes fired up. However, once he had them all hot & bothered, he’d hit the prey distress and the coyotes would come just close enough to see the area/source of the sound and stop. Some would work their way downwind, but many would just look for a few seconds and leave. Very few would commit themselves to anything closer than 250-400 yards.
Sound familiar?
His first stand with the Budget Bird was in a place that he’d called before and had coyotes hang up. He and his son Carl called in two hard charging coyotes to under 30 yards and both were fixated on the Budget Bird decoy. One even came running in from the downwind side!
Here’s how he cured the hang-up problem:
Mike is far too cheap (uh…I mean budget minded) to just go and buy a decoy. So, armed with a hot glue gun, some leftover paint in his garage, a horse pasture full of Canadian goose feathers, and a dove decoy from Wal Mart, he built the Budget Bird.
-
He started with a standard gray colored dove decoy. With left over paint he gave it a red head and an off-white body with black specks. This coloration sufficiently matched the woodpeckers near his house.
-
So it can be mounted on a dowel rod, he hot glued a 3-inch piece of 1/2 inch PVC pipe on the bottom of the bird. An empty shotgun shell will work here too – just glue the brass end to the decoy so the open end can fit over the dowel.
-
To give the decoy some motion he drilled a hole in the tail of the decoy and added a short piece of 15lb fishing line with a clip swivel at the end (the swivel is VERY important to avoid tangles and allow for quick feather replacement). He then tied a short piece of fishing line to a goose feather, tied a loop on end and attached it to the swivel. Any large feather will work.
Because the feathers get beat up pretty easy Mike is trying a strip of material from a Tyvek envelope to see if the decoy gets the same good response from coyotes. Tyvek is tough as nails, light like a feather, and impervious to rain – it should work well, but is untested at this time.
NOTE: Mike told me that a guy needs to have a few different lengths of dowel rod in the truck, so the decoy can always be set up above the grass or other ground cover. In places that have very little cover he uses a 2-foot piece. In areas that have bushes about 2 and 3-feet high, he uses a 4 or 5-foot piece.
ANOTHER NOTE: The feather moves and flutters in the slightest breeze. If the string is too long, it wraps around the dowel rod. Also, if you don’t have the swivel in the line, the line twists right up the tail of the decoy up and will eventually cause the line to break.
Good luck to everyone with this decoy-on-the-cheap tip. If you build one and it works for you too, we’d like to know. Please send us the pictures!!
If you’d like to get automatic blog updates with tips like this, just subscribe in the upper right hand corner of this page.
Comments are always appreciated.
Good hunting,
Mark Healy




I’m curious to know if this worked.
I live in the meridian/boise area and hunt coyotes as well. Has he had any success with this?
Ryan,
I have personal success to report, but I’ll get to that in a minute…
I just talked to my brother and he reports that the very first time the decoy was used he had two coyotes charge right up to the decoy – staring right at it. The coyotes came in from different directions, including one from downwind, and both coyotes ended up under 10 feet from the decoy. He had his young son with him at the time and neither coyote was taken.
Keep in mind, my brother is a newbie greenhorn caller and his son (11yrs old) was likely overwhelmed with the situation.
Since that time he’s called in two more coyotes that he knows saw the decoy, but the coyotes also saw him and his calling buddy too. He’s called other coyotes, but is reluctant to say the decoy had anything to do with them coming in.
Now then…
I have called 2 coyotes and a handful of gray fox that responded positively to the decoy.
One of the coyotes came in on the upper lip of a deep canyon and was looking down at the caller and the budget bird decoy in the bottom (about 150-200 feet downhill). The coyote stood above for about a minute or so, and then found a horrible path down a decomposed granite funnel and came down into the canyon. He was high-steppin’, head straight out, all the way up to the decoy, keeping an eye on it as he approached. I was looking for a cougar and never moved a muscle, other than to turn the volume down. He eventually left after a full inspection of the inedible plastic bird & turkey feather. This coyote was convinced he was gonna get lunch up to about 10 or 12 steps from the decoy. Had I been inclined to shoot him, he would have been an easy target.
I also had a coyote emerge from a tangled brushy canyon bottom and trot up to the decoy. Again, it was about 10 – 12 yards from the decoy and looking hard at the decoy. This coyote eventually lost interest and left at a trot.
I usually hunt in thick, rocky stuff and I’d imagine birds make up a good part of the coyotes diet in these areas.
Since I am usually in the thick brush & boulder canyons, I call bucket-loads of gray fox. They readily come over to the decoy and have an intense manner of inspecting it. They don’t jump on it, but they look at it from 10 yards away, change positions, and look again. If I keep changing sounds they keep looking. They just don’t seem to know whether or not sealing the deal and grabbing the bird is a good idea or not.
I have not had the good fortune to see a bobcat or lion approach this decoy yet. Although, I have successfully used nothing more than a turkey fan feather to get a bobcat’s attention and get him in to the caller in the past, thus I’ll bet the bird/turkey feather combo will work just fine for them.
So to answer your question – yes, we have both experinced good responses from predators with it.
I appreciate the question,
Mark Healy