collapse

Advertisement


Author Topic: Calling coyotes while windy  (Read 1710 times)

Offline pashok23

  • Trade Count: (+3)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Aug 2011
  • Posts: 1475
  • Location: Marysville WA
Calling coyotes while windy
« on: November 01, 2018, 10:24:05 PM »
Do you guys calling coyotes when its windy?  I'd say 12-15 mph wind. Was thinking to get out and call coyotes first time this year on Saturday but it will be windy.

Offline Wanttohuntmore

  • Political & Covid-19 Topics
  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Jan 2009
  • Posts: 1957
Re: Calling coyotes while windy
« Reply #1 on: November 02, 2018, 04:53:13 AM »
Personally haven't had luck in wind over 10mph.  Seems like the more still the better.  Might have just been my stands those times.  I tend to think the sound isn't carrying as well, rather than the yotes being cautious.

Offline wolftrapper

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Hunter
  • ***
  • Join Date: Dec 2013
  • Posts: 218
  • Location: Eastern
  • Groups: RMEF Pheasants Forever NRA
Re: Calling coyotes while windy
« Reply #2 on: November 02, 2018, 05:42:53 AM »
Windy is not good.  The sound doesn't carry well, and there's a better chance that they will smell you, with all the turbulence swirling around.

Offline pashok23

  • Trade Count: (+3)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Aug 2011
  • Posts: 1475
  • Location: Marysville WA
Re: Calling coyotes while windy
« Reply #3 on: November 02, 2018, 08:19:22 AM »
Yeah, thats what i was thinking. I'll wait for better days.

Offline Okanagan

  • Political & Covid-19 Topics
  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Longhunter
  • *****
  • Join Date: Nov 2010
  • Posts: 708
Re: Calling coyotes while windy
« Reply #4 on: November 02, 2018, 09:20:45 AM »
Calling on a windy day rarely works for me, to the point that I don't call when it is windy.  The very few coyotes that let me see them on such days, when I was first calling, were extra wary, rarely giving me a shot.  Some of the Wyoming callers hunt in the wind anyway because they don't get many calm days, but I can wait and up my odds. 

FWIW, a wind anecdote:  I spotted a pair of coyotes on a super windy day east of the mountains, in a frozen swampy meadow with patches of willows around it.  I slipped to within 150 yards of the coyotes, backed into a willow clump angled across/upwind of them and started hand calling fairly softly.  The coyotes disappeared for awhile, then one stepped up on a higher mound about 100 yards in front of me and watched intently.  I quit calling.  As has happened other times, the second coyote sneaked up close to me while keeping an eye on its lookout partner on the mound.

The wind was violent but I heard the close coyote moving in the willows, possibly as close as 6 feet behind me. But the willow clump was impenetrable to anything bigger than a mink and the wind was taking my scent across the swamp rather than into the willows behind me.  I think I did some lip squeeks then but can't recall for sure.  I moved to try to see it and the lookout coyote changed body position from facing me to angling away.  IME that change from facing the source of the sound to broadside or angling away is a signal to the coyote sneaking close to me to get out of there.

Soon after that the lookout coyote loped away and the other one joined it as they left. I never saw it from the time I started calling till it was leaving, though I could track where it was by watching where the sentinel coyote looked.  (On further tangent, I have kept track of approaching coyotes by watching horses and cattle and elk that were watching the coyote).

Bow hunting for coyotes taught me a few things as I watched coyotes for awhile rather than take my rifle shot way out there.  Lest this be taken wrongly, let the record show that I love my heavy barrelled 6mm however.

Offline AWS

  • Trade Count: (+2)
  • Sourdough
  • *****
  • Join Date: Dec 2007
  • Posts: 1838
Re: Calling coyotes while windy
« Reply #5 on: November 02, 2018, 10:06:59 PM »
I hunt no matter the wind conditions.  I like to hunt thicker patches in low areas.  When it is windy you can get quite close to them if your working up wind to a stand, the wind helps dampen your sound as it does the callers.  I find that coyotes that respond in the wind usually come in very fast.  The last one in the wind was last spring just east of Mattawa, the sand was drifting across the roads and the tumble weeds were rolling along the tops of the sage.  I turned on the caller and scanned the ridge only to look down and see him looking up at the caller.  He did book but as I hadn't spooked him he circled down wind of the caller but never got into the scent cone and was working his way back to the caller.  With the caller four feet off the ground I think he didn't get my scent, or didn't care.  It was late Feb so I'm pretty sure he had heard call before.
After the first shot the rest are just noise.

Make mine a Minaska

 


* Advertisement

* Recent Topics

AUCTION: SE Idaho DIY Deer or Deer/Elk Hunt by Dan-o
[Today at 10:28:23 AM]


Utah cow elk hunt by kselkhunter
[Today at 09:03:55 AM]


KODIAK06 2025 trail cam and personal pics thread by kodiak06
[Today at 07:03:46 AM]


Unknown Suppressors - Whisper Pickle by Sneaky
[Today at 04:09:53 AM]


Early Huckleberry Bull Moose tag drawn! by HillHound
[Yesterday at 11:25:17 PM]


THE ULTIMATE QUAD!!!! by Deer slayer
[Yesterday at 10:33:55 PM]


Archery elk gear, 2025. by WapitiTalk1
[Yesterday at 09:41:28 PM]


Oregon spring bear by kodiak06
[Yesterday at 04:40:38 PM]


Tree stand for Western Washingtn by kodiak06
[Yesterday at 04:37:01 PM]


Pocket Carry by BKMFR
[Yesterday at 03:34:12 PM]


A lonely Job... by Loup Loup
[Yesterday at 01:15:11 PM]


Range finders & Angle Compensation by Fidelk
[Yesterday at 11:58:48 AM]


Willapa Hills 1 Bear by hunter399
[Yesterday at 10:55:29 AM]


Bearpaw Outfitters Annual July 4th Hunt Sale by bearpaw
[Yesterday at 08:40:03 AM]

SimplePortal 2.3.7 © 2008-2025, SimplePortal