Myths & Truths About Coyotes: What You Need to Know About America's Most Misunderstood Predator

Myths & Truths About Coyotes: What You Need to Know About America's Most Misunderstood Predator

by Carol Cartaino
Myths & Truths About Coyotes: What You Need to Know About America's Most Misunderstood Predator

Myths & Truths About Coyotes: What You Need to Know About America's Most Misunderstood Predator

by Carol Cartaino

eBook

$10.49  $11.95 Save 12% Current price is $10.49, Original price is $11.95. You Save 12%.

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Coyotes hold a peculiar interest as both an enduring symbol of the wild and a powerful predator we are always anxious to avoid. This book examines the spread of coyotes across the country over the past century, and the storm of concern and controversy that has followed. Individual chapters cover the surprisingly complex question of how to identify a coyote, the real and imagined dangers they pose, their personality and lifestyle, and nondeadly ways of discouraging them.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780897328722
Publisher: Menasha Ridge Press
Publication date: 10/01/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 192
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Carol Cartaino, a native of New Jersey and graduate of Rutgers University (major in English and minor in biology), has had a lifetime interest in animals, the outdoors, and the natural world. She has spent many happy hours hiking, camping, fishing, river rafting, kayaking, and engaging in outdoor photography and nature study.

For the past 40 years, Carol has been a professional book editor and writer's collaborator, working on almost every subject imaginable within nonfiction, with a strong emphasis on how-to, self-help, and reference. She has helped authors from Jack Samson of Field&Stream to scuba divers to underwater photographers, from the editor of Arizona Highways to plastic surgeons, travel writers to experts on moonshine, produce complete and satisfying books. In her ten years as an editor in the Trade Division of Prentice-Hall, Inc., books on nature and gardening were among her specialties. In the ten years that followed as the editor-in-chief of Writer's Digest Books, she worked with a great variety of authors, again with a focus on how-to and reference. In her 20 years of freelance editing and collaboration since, she has been a book doctor for literary agents, publishers, book producers, and individual authors of many kinds, including environmentalists and veterinarians.

Carol presently lives with her son and many pets on a 66-acre farm in Southern Ohio, on which she can continue her nature study and listen to the coyote songs.

Read an Excerpt

What do coyotes actually do all day? Am I more likely to see them in the daytime or at night?

To answer this question, we have to take “day” in its larger sense—that is, a 24-hour period. In their original prairie homes before European settlers arrived in this country, coyotes traveled about a great deal in the daytime. They still do, in undeveloped areas, wildlands, and anywhere they feel comfortable and unthreatened. And we may see them abroad in daylight almost anywhere, even now, during the pup-raising season, when both parents have to do a great deal of hunting to keep all of those little mouths fed. Young coyotes, such as half-grown pups, are very likely to be active during the day, as well.

However, for the most part, the more people who inhabit an area, the more nocturnal coyotes are there. Thus urban and suburban coyotes are more nocturnal than rural ones, though they may alter this pattern to take advantage of special circumstances they become aware of, such as someone faithfully pouring out big bowls of dog or cat food during the day.

In summer, coyotes are even more likely to be night hunters, since hot midday is not the best time to be moving around in a warm fur coat, and at this time of year, prey and fruits and vegetables, too, are plentiful. In winter, when food is much harder to come by, coyotes may be forced to do some daytime hunting just to stay alive.

Sunrise, sunset . . .
Even when coyotes are largely nocturnal, their all-time most active periods are when day eases into night, and vice versa. This means twilight and daybreak. As many of their prey species—many of them nocturnal too— are setting out for their night’s hunting or grazing, or winding down before the next day’s rest, the coyotes are out there, paying close attention.

The ghost on the move
In general, whenever human activity slows or stops, coyotes creep out and do their thing. Except for the brief period each year devoted to mating, this largely means prospecting for food. In one form or another, this is what occupies most of a coyote’s waking hours. In the nightly (or daily) quest to fill their bellies, coyotes follow game trails, livestock trails, human trails, dirt roads, other roads, train tracks, and power-line corridors. Just like us, they prefer the path of least resistance, whatever route will take them where they are headed the most direct and easiest way. They usually take the “back way” into places, traveling in the spots few people look at or pay attention to, such as the edges or back of things and in gullies, washes, and the like. If you have ever taken a train trip, you have seen how many parts of our everyday environment we are scarcely aware of, but they are there. Urban coyotes, especially, cross many a road in their forays, and the speed with which they do this can be awe-inspiring.

When just exploring for possibilities, they move at a trot, or quick shuffle. When they feel safe from observation or interference, they dart into farm fields and backyards, survey picnic areas and roadsides, many a place they would never venture to in the full light of day.

Naptime
When the time comes for a coyote to sleep, he often does so at midday, or the hottest part of a day. His “bedroom” is some protected area, usually one with good visibility. He doesn’t need an actual shelter of any kind, even in the winter, just some thick brush, a fencerow, thicket, pile of rocks or uprooted trees, or field of tall grass or weeds, or grain, that he can curl up amidst. In urban areas, he may even consider an abandoned building. But the ever-cautious coyote, even in captivity, usually prefers not to be enclosed in any way during his naptimes. Coyotes only use burrows, holes, or caves in denning time, or the most violent weather.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

About the Authors

Introduction

A Quick Perspective on Coyotes

Coyotes Up Close

A Look at Coyote Society

The Country Coyote

The City Coyote

Coyote Control: Ways of Discouraging Coyotes

When Coyotes Must Go: Trapping and hunting Coyotes

A Few Last Facts About Coyotes

Parting Thoughts

Recommended Reading

Index

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews