It’s lone. Idk about KC, but South Carolina if they are lone and you see them attacking (on cam or in person) in the day time they have been pushed out of the pack. We have been over run by ‘Yotes here in SC. Thanks DNR!! It helped combat the Whitetail deer population!!!!🙃🙃 you’ll have to sh**t it or Bernard get ahold of him and put him out. That risks Bernard getting seriously hurt even though that’s his job and is built like a tank!😂 I suggest sh**ing it and hauling it waaaaaay off from your property.
@@woodlandacres I think they’ll just eat it. They are natures garbage can. They clean up the dead and rotting and the weak living. They’ll wait for a doe to drop a baby and then maul it once it hits the ground…..
Hens inside a large electric net . It kept predators at bay for me , without LGD. Will also keep them from sending you on egg hunts around the farm . Choose non roaming chicken breeds that prefer to hang in close to coop and other flock members. If that white bird is a leghorn, I believe they will roam . That predator will always attack a loner first . And let the LGD roam the whole property perimeter. Now I have two dogs that’s what I do. My place neighbors a large cattle property. My animals are at risk from dingo and foxes. Good luck
Thanks! Yea the electric net idea is what I had in mind also, the downside is it requires regularly moving the net around the property along with a mobile coop.
yea we did have our dog protecting our entire yard, until he decided to start leaving our property to go after the coyotes. Now we have to keep him contained for his safety, and now unfortunately the coyotes know where our dog cannot go
@@woodlandacres Yeah...sorry, like a fool I commented before listening to you speak at the end of the video....ugh...and was leaving and forgot to return to edit & will now leave my stupidity for amusement sake in lieu of wasting your time because of it. I do wish you the best of luck with the issue that obviously is going to require some serious time and likely resource devotion to combat.
@@woodlandacres and if he runs off after the ‘Yote and survives the road it MAY lead him back to a pack that is waiting for the scout to not come back or being soemthing back and screaming for them to get whatever’s on its butt off of it! Lol
It’s lone. Idk about KC, but South Carolina if they are lone and you see them attacking (on cam or in person) in the day time they have been pushed out of the pack. We have been over run by ‘Yotes here in SC. Thanks DNR!! It helped combat the Whitetail deer population!!!!🙃🙃 you’ll have to sh**t it or Bernard get ahold of him and put him out. That risks Bernard getting seriously hurt even though that’s his job and is built like a tank!😂 I suggest sh**ing it and hauling it waaaaaay off from your property.
Good to know facts, thx! I was told to leave a dead coyote around to deter other coyotes from coming. That not true?
@@woodlandacres I think they’ll just eat it. They are natures garbage can. They clean up the dead and rotting and the weak living. They’ll wait for a doe to drop a baby and then maul it once it hits the ground…..
Sorry, it will come back again,so take immediate action.
yea we're on high alert, may consider just keeping the chickens locked in the coop for the time being.
Hens inside a large electric net . It kept predators at bay for me , without LGD.
Will also keep them from sending you on egg hunts around the farm .
Choose non roaming chicken breeds that prefer to hang in close to coop and other flock members. If that white bird is a leghorn, I believe they will roam . That predator will always attack a loner first .
And let the LGD roam the whole property perimeter. Now I have two dogs that’s what I do. My place neighbors a large cattle property. My animals are at risk from dingo and foxes.
Good luck
Thanks! Yea the electric net idea is what I had in mind also, the downside is it requires regularly moving the net around the property along with a mobile coop.
Utilize your dog to protect the entire yard....after you Bait that coyote back in because it will NEVER STOP now until you shoot/remove it.
yea we did have our dog protecting our entire yard, until he decided to start leaving our property to go after the coyotes. Now we have to keep him contained for his safety, and now unfortunately the coyotes know where our dog cannot go
@@woodlandacres Yeah...sorry, like a fool I commented before listening to you speak at the end of the video....ugh...and was leaving and forgot to return to edit & will now leave my stupidity for amusement sake in lieu of wasting your time because of it. I do wish you the best of luck with the issue that obviously is going to require some serious time and likely resource devotion to combat.
@@desireegoulett69 LOL, no worries! I have an idea of what I'll probably have to do...
Why can’t your dog get out to get the coyote?
He won't cross the hot wire, and if we let him out he'll run off after the coyote. We're too close to a highway to risk him running off.
@@woodlandacres and if he runs off after the ‘Yote and survives the road it MAY lead him back to a pack that is waiting for the scout to not come back or being soemthing back and screaming for them to get whatever’s on its butt off of it! Lol