In 1992 we were driving down the highway from my grandfather's home in Livingston up to Malta to shoot coyotes and I looked out the window and saw a fox swimming in a canal... .. . so I say: pull over there is a fox swimming in the canal.
We jump out and the fox spies us and high tails it outa' there. But he caught a bullet on his exit. So we are standing there talking and I look across an open area and see a fox looking out of the rough, tall grass and sage, a hundred fifty yards away... and we shoot him. Then another one pops his head up and looks right at us... and we shoot him. Then three or four stick their head up and look at us and we shoot a couple of them. Then others start popping their head up to get a look and it is like a shooting gallery. No sooner would we shoot one and another would pop his head up to take a look.
IIRC, we picked up six or seven. They were all adults and who knows why they were so curious. I just talked to one of the guys who was in the truck with me and he reminded me of that experience.
Has anyone else ever heard of anything so odd? I have seen a "pack" of foxes feeding on a dead steer, and have seen a "pack" working around a hay shed, but have no experience with foxes being so hell bent on getting a better look at something like three guys shooting at them that they needed a better look.