Wildlife Callers

Video Blog – Barking a Coyote to a Stop, Bad Shooting, & Anti-Hunter Comments

In this video blog Mark Healy attempts to bark a coyote to a stop with horrible results.  We’ve analyzed the scenario and believe we know why the coyote hit the afterburners when he heard the bark.  Take a look for yourselves and give us your thoughts. 

We also take a few minutes to read a pair of reader comments from the dozens we’ve received over the last several weeks.  We provide some insight, intellectual analysis, and a rebuttal to each based on professional consultation we solicited from outside the company.

 

We’ve all seen it before.  A called coyote comes running in, the camera guy or the shooter need it to stop for a second or two, and someone barks.  In the dozens of times I’ve done it, the coyote usually pauses just long enough to make a clean shot, or get some photos.  Occasionally, like in this video, the coyote looks like he’s been poked with a cattle prod and getting any shot at the running dog is akin to skeet shooting.

If you click on the video a second time you can view it in full screen at YouTube.  

We are always amazed and amused by the number of people who take time from their day to send us pointless personal attack emails.  Now I know firsthand what Howard Stern meant when he said “Why don’t they just change the channel.  No one is forced to listen to me”.  Although, it would be nice to see a lib wing nut try to make a coherent argument rather than offering a simpleton death wish laced with profanity.  If only…

As always, thank you for stopping in and adding value to the Wildlife Callers Blog!  Better days in the field are what we’re all about.  If this video makes a difference on your next hunt and you bag the coyote, we’ve achieved our goal. 

A big thanks to all of you who’ve added meaningful comments in the past!  New comments can be added below this post. 

Subscriptions to the blog are FREE!  Just add your email address to the top right hand side of this page in the SUBSCRIPTION area and you’ll receive free blog updates and new posts about Wildlife Callers.  NO SPAM and we don’t sell email addresses. 

You can add a friend’s email – just let them know you did it!!

Much hunting success to everyone,

Mark Healy

mark@wildlifecallers.com

The Gray Fox Video That Wasn’t – Equipment Lessons Learned

Mark Healy and I went calling mountain lions this past weekend and as usual, I packed up the video camera and gear in hope of capturing a cougar coming to the call. I have been getting better with the use of the Canon GL1 that we use and was feeling pretty confident that if a cat came in, I would be ready to capture the event on film.

 

We left early Sunday morning to head up to the area where we know Mt. Lions are roaming based on our scouting and trail cam footage. We arrived at our first stand just as the sun was coming up, clear and cool, and called for just over an hour. No lions, so we moved on to our next stand and set up.  Same result, no cats, but it was a perfect day and we were trying some new set ups that we hadn’t tried before.

Our third stand saw no action, so we took a break for lunch and started to head off for our next stand. When we reached our next location, we had company there, the first other hunter we’d seen all day. We moved on to another location that we’d not been to in a while but knew cougars were occasionally in this canyon from past scouting efforts.

Mark got the the caller set up and I prepared the GL1 on the opposite side of the canyon, perched on the edge overlooking the canyon below.  Mark returned and set his seat about 5-yards from my location, fired up the Wildlife Tech MA-15 and started calling.

Now, we’re normally ”cats only” on our hunts, but after three 90 minute stands and no action, we were getting a little bored. At roughly the 3 minute mark into this 4th stand, the partridge in distress caused a very large gray fox to break cover and run for the caller.  Mark said “man, that’s a nice fox” and asked me if we should take him, I said “why not, but let’s make sure we get it on film”.  I picked up the fox in my viewfinder, tracked him as he made his way to the caller, bounding up the steep, rocky face of the canyon to the mesquite the MA-15 was located in. 

The gray fox circled the brush and emerged just to the right of the caller, Mark took aim, asked if I had him framed up, and fired. The fox jumped, and took off down the canyon, Mark was beside himself, couldn’t believe he missed a cheesy 91-yard shot!  I tracked the fox on the GL1 for over a hundred yards until he disappeared into the brush of the canyon bottom. 

We change sounds and within 2 minutes, another gray fox that couldn’t resist pileated woodpecker distress emerges from the brushy canyon bottom and starts toward the MA-15.  I picked him up right away in my viewfinder.  This fox is just as big or bigger than the first – we’re obviously in the land of the giant grays.  I find the fox in my viewfinder and as quickly as he started up to the caller, he does an about-face half way up the canyon wall and leaves. 

I’m wondering what made him leave, when Mark tells me a third gray fox is on it’s way and exclaims it’s even larger than the first two.  I quickly had this fox in my frame and followed it’s approach without missing a beat.  He climbed to the top of the canyon about 75-yards from the speaker and heads toward the caller along the rim of the canyon. I lose him temporarily in some brush but pick him up emerging on the other side and continue to film as he approached the caller. The gray fox perches just above the caller, broadside in full view, again Mark asks if I have him, I say yes and zoom in, awaiting the shot.

Boom! Looks like a direct hit! Then the fox takes off up the hill towards the canyon rim, looking like he hasn’t been touched by the shot! Just as disbelief is setting in that Mark missed again, the fox leaps toward another rock, loses his oil pressure, and drops in mid leap! Amazing! I have this all on film, it’s going to be some of the best footage we have yet!  We are both pretty excited  but we continue to call for a while longer.

 

Gray Fox 12-20-09

 

We finally end the stand & Mark retrieves the fox about 12 yards from the point of impact.  He finds a clean ribcage shot through-and-through, and almost no damage to the fox at all.  It’s no wonder he took off like he did, the fox probably didn’t even know it had been hit!  The fox is a very large male and has a very thick, shiny gray & brilliant red winter coat.  He’ll make an outstanding full-size mount. 

The next day, I fire up the GL1, excited to view the great footage from the day before. I’m stunned, the video is scrambled and although partially visible, not viewable! I’m beside myself.  I pop in another tape, it plays fine and now I realize that I had a defective tape in the camera the whole day – major disappointment sets in. 

We would have liked to have this video posted here, but we’ll have to settle for the photos.  The tape was brand new and there was no reason to believe it would be defective.  Lesson learned, check all the equipment, including new video tapes, the night before.

Hey, at least it wasn’t lost footage of a mountain lion coming in.  I suppose every cloud has a silver lining.

Marc Reindell

marc@wildlifecallers.com

Gray Fox Calling Up Close – Video Attached

Call ‘em close and keep ‘em close.  Gray fox are just one predator that can be manipulated with animal vocalizations and distress sounds – watch this little guy talking back at us. 

 

On one of my last trips to Central Arizona for a lion scouting and calling trip, I found myself, as I often do, in the middle of several gray fox.  Because my focus is calling mountain lions, I rarely shoot fox these days.  However, I’ve had some newer guys to this predator calling sport ask me to do some educational videos of animals coming to the call.  I thought this was an excellent idea. 

Arizona Gray Fox

Arizona Gray Fox

Because my intent is not to harvest a fox, I have the unique opportunity to film the behavior of the animal from the time it arrives to the time it leaves.  Also, while I have the fox in the area of the caller, I have the opportunity to use the sounds from my Wildlife Technologies caller to capture and keep the attention of the animal for long periods of time.  The result is video that shows people some basic ways to scout for and to call a fox, but the video clips also demonstrate how animals respond to being called and what happens during various sound changes on the caller. 

In this video I call in a very vocal fox that comes in fast, stays for a long time, and puts on a great show. (more…)

Holy Mountain Lion Batman! – Why We Scout

We’ve always said that year-round scouting is a critical piece of cougar calling success.  This is why we scout – patiently. 

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In a previous blog, we posted this scouting video from one of our trail cameras.  The video shows a young lion walking down a hard-pan dry wash bottom

 

 

We noted right away that this lion was still fairly young and not going to be a ”shooter” for a couple more seasons.  However, we thought the area looked promising and this particular drainage should have a more dominant lion in it.  We were very right…

 

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Scouting + Calling = Wildlife Photography Results

This is part 2 of Chad Messa’s guest post here at Wildlife Callers.  Chad talks about the importance of scouting and using animal calls to get his photos. This information hopefully will help our readers in their own pursuit of that one great wildlife photo shot!  This information also applies to hunting predators as well. 

 

Photographing wildlife is very similar to hunting, although I sometimes have to get closer and be a lot more patient. This is because I have to get more than just one shot of a given animal.

I like to be anywhere from 20 to 30 yards away. This gives me the opportunity to get a good tight photograph of that animal for cover shots. When good action shots are needed I try to stay a little farther away.

 

tn_MESA1941 copy2 (2)

 

The single most important lesson I can give is this, learn about the species you are going to photograph, read all you can about that species before you even attempt to go out and photograph them.

Learn when they are breeding, what their diet consists of, and when they are most active.

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