This'll tick off those who think coyotes are to shoot, but too bad.
We have an old bachelor coyote living across the tracks in our hayfield. He's been there for years. Howls when the train goes by, and drives the dogs crazy. This coyote spends July following the baler and grabbing mice from under the swaths. He comes out when the bales are being picked up too. (With 8 donkeys in the pasture, predation is not an issue! He behaves himself admirably around the livestock.)
Anyway, last July he showed up to follow the baler, and the poor old thing was suffering from a horrible case of mange. Had hardly any hair left. This means freezing to death in our neighbourhood. So I got a bright idea, and went out one evening with a can of cat food that had a part of a cc of ivomec in it. I left it near where we think his den is. Well, didn't he just eat it.
Saw him last night for the first time in months, and he is fat and sassy, and has the most beautiful thick coat you ever saw.
He's still a bachelor, though. LOL
We have an old bachelor coyote living across the tracks in our hayfield. He's been there for years. Howls when the train goes by, and drives the dogs crazy. This coyote spends July following the baler and grabbing mice from under the swaths. He comes out when the bales are being picked up too. (With 8 donkeys in the pasture, predation is not an issue! He behaves himself admirably around the livestock.)
Anyway, last July he showed up to follow the baler, and the poor old thing was suffering from a horrible case of mange. Had hardly any hair left. This means freezing to death in our neighbourhood. So I got a bright idea, and went out one evening with a can of cat food that had a part of a cc of ivomec in it. I left it near where we think his den is. Well, didn't he just eat it.
Saw him last night for the first time in months, and he is fat and sassy, and has the most beautiful thick coat you ever saw.
He's still a bachelor, though. LOL
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