Wildlife Callers
Healy - America's Firearms Provider

Dave’s Got Just One Day to Predator Hunt — A Bobcat and Coyote Go Down

Dave Martens of Wildlife Callers has a single Sunday to hunt and heads out with a bobcat/coyote/gray fox “AZ Predator Slam” on his mind.  By his fourth stand two are down.

 

Good Morning Calling - Dave Martens with a Bobcat and Coyote in Central Arizona

With just a single day to hunt and gas prices climbing, Dave heads to a location not too far from his East Valley home for a day of mixed-bag calling.  Dave’s mission was simple–get an “AZ Predator Slam” (gray fox, coyote, and bobcat) in one day–if he called and bagged a cougar too and made it a Predator Grand Slam, that would be big icing on the cake.  The weather had prevented a multi-day hunt and he met sloppy & frozen road conditions almost immediately as he headed north.

Snow Covered Roads and AZ DPS Officers Dealing with Wrecks

Dave figured once he got to where he was headed he’d be able to get a gray fox right away and then work some other areas to find a coyote and bobcat.  As it turns out, he started his first stand with about a minute of Adult Cottontail Distress, a minute of Ravens Fighting, and then back to about 20 seconds of Adult Cottontail Distress and a medium-sized female coyote ran in and stopped just a couple yards from his Wildlife Technologies Mighty Atom 21 and about 12 steps from his 12ga.  Bang!  Dave’s got a coyote on the quad.

His next two stands–both of which are rock-solid gray fox locations–immediately draw blanks.  Dave was undeterred and headed a little higher up the hill to a location he’s seen fox and bobcat sign in previously.  Dave got into a promising looking location and within a minute or two had located a set of bobcat tracks that had a light dusting of snow covering them.  Figuring they’re as fresh as he was going to find, he dropped into the canyon the ‘cat track headed into and set his Mighty Atom near a bush and sat down about 15 yards away under a juniper tree.  Just as he was sitting down a hard snow flurry starts blowing and Dave can’t see more than just a few yards.

Dave considers waiting until the snow stops blowing or possibly just leaving, but goes ahead with stand number 4 anyway.  Dave said the snow continued for about 3-minutes while he was calling and then stopped all at once, just as quickly as it had began.  About 30 seconds later a nice AZ tom bobcat walked to less than 24 inches from his Mighty Atom E-caller.  A single shot from his 12ga dropped the bobcat right next to the speaker.  Dave’s Wildlife Tech sound combo was exactly the same as his first stand–Adult Cottontail Distress/Ravens Fighting/Adult Cottontail Distress/Bang!

Nice Bobcat Dropped Right Next to Dave's Wildlife Tech Mighty Atom 21

Dave Martens and a Late February Bobcat in Central Arizona

It’s now mid-morning and Dave is feeling confident that a Predator Slam is darn good possibility–he’s got a bobcat and coyote strapped to his quad and several more hours to hunt for a gray fox to add to his predator collection.  Dave’s thinking that he might even be able to put a fox in the bag early and ride down into some of his better mountain lion setups and try to achieve a Predator Grand Slam.  But, in the end, as often happens with our sport, his hunting luck turned around and he called 7 or 8 additional stands (into outstanding gray fox habitat) and came up empty.

After a long ride on his quad in the dark back to his truck, Dave took inventory of his day out and couldn’t complain.  Any day you take the time to load up all your gear, make the trip out to the field in miserable weather, and call in/take a bobcat and a coyote is a great day.

If you enjoyed the story and found the calling information valuable, please subscribe to receive blog updates.  We will NOT sell/rent/give your email to any third parties.

Guest comments are always welcome — please scroll down to the comments section at the bottom of the page.

Thank you again for reading — and good calling,

Mark Healy

480-882-1210

info@wildlifecallers.com

Coyote Pair Called on Video – Mouse Squeaks & Crow Sounds Bring ‘em In

While in Chillicothe, Missouri this past January for a few days of coyote and mixed-bag predator calling, I captured this pair of winter coyotes coming to the call.

These coyotes responded in about 7-8 minutes to a mixture of mouse and vole distress squeaks combined with sounds of crows mobbing food and excited crow calling from my Wildlife Technologies Mighty Atom 21 electronic wildlife caller.  I’ve used this technique successfully many other times.  I play the sounds continuously and vary the volume from medium to medium/loud.  Once the predator is spotted coming in,  I drop the volume to keep it/them moving toward the speaker. 

Unfortunately, the shooter hit the coyote too far back to be immediately effective. 

Thank you again for reading and sending us your success photos!  We enjoy hearing about the success you’re having in the field.  Please feel free to add your comments below.

Blog subscriptions are always FREE:

Good calling,

Mark Healy

mark@wildlifecallers.com

Second Chance Coyote – Coyote Called In, Shot & Wounded, then Called In Again

Field Tactics: Quick changes to your location, and the addition of new sounds can bring coyotes back in – even in these extreme circumstances. 

 

Predator callers, especially the newer guys, often wonder when a stand is “burned” and what if anything can be done when a coyote has winded them, or they have fired a missed shot at one.  The short answer is yes, something can be done.  Here’s a video that demonstrates that a coyote can be called (in this case, called and wounded) and then immediately re-called if the caller reacts quickly, changes positions, and gives the coyote a new scenario and sound picture that gets its attention back. 

Does this tactic work every time?  No – but, then again, nothing works every time.  However, it’s one more tactic for a coyote caller to use in the field.  Let’s face it, coyotes have no idea what a gun is or what sound a gun makes.  You always have a fair chance at re-gaining control of the coyote’s behavior if you change its mind. 

Coyotes aren’t always easy to find and we always try to make the most of the ones we’ve already located.  We believe that most unproductive stands are unproductive simply because we’re calling and there’s nothing close enough to be listening, or close enough to care.  Finding coyotes and knowing exactly where they are is definitely more than half the battle of successfully calling them.  Once you have one or more coyotes located, exhaust all opportunities to put ‘em in your truck. 

Thank you again for reading.  If you or a friend would like a FREE subscription to the blog, just put your email below and click SUBSCRIBE. 

Your comments are always appreciated – just scroll down to the bottom of the page to submit your questions or thoughts. 

Good hunting,

Mark Healy

mark@wildlifecallers.com