Free: Contests & Raffles.
Yeah I have cats/bears/yotes/bobs on camera around St Helens, off Hwy 2, all up and down the Methow, the NE corner...and I've only had cameras for 2 years now. They're everywhere. I'm taking/have taken a few dedicated predator hunts this year to areas I hunt deer and elk. Unfortunately I can't do that every weekend but I would if I could. In between I'm trying to clear predators out of other people's hunting spots I guess
THe Wenas is full of coyotes. There are professional hunters that hunt the Wenas. THere are members on here that hunt the Wenas and saying WHAT THE.... to this post. I shoot every coyote I have a safe shot at from my porch. They still keep coming. Literally I think the only thing that will rid the area of coyotes will be wolves. I suspect much of Eastern Washington is the same.
Dont take my post as a b**** fest that nobody is helping me if thats how it came out!!I do spend time in the areas i elk and deer hunt, im looking for more areas.Thanks Jrebel for the info on the NE, I should of mentioned that earlier, it might be a while before i make it that far east but thanks thats the info i was hoping more people would share. Not just for me specifically but for every other hunter thats looking for intel on this subject. My intention is that a lot of people are saying predators are an issue but when asked where can I help out...mums the word. Not one person said head into the Methow valley, potholes, blues, etc. Ya I can glean some of that info from here now and again. Ask me where to predator hunt and im going to direct you to the areas I know hold predators and what has worked for me. I want them gone! I will give out gps coordinates even of where i have set up.
Thanks for the info guys.Im going to go out on a limb here and say the whole predator problem comes across somewhat 2 faced.This was a sincere request and also a test somewhat. Did I expect anyone to immediately give up their predator honey holes?? Absolutely not, they have spent the time to find these areas and figure out what works and what doesn't. Most of us have limited time to hunt and want it to be as productive as possible which means limit competition, as one of the factors. On the other hand we cant scream that predators need to be thinned out yet stay tight liped about where they need thinned. I get it..its the entire state that needs help for sure. Also I know lots of people want to keep quiet because its where they deer/elk hunt and dont want to give that up. Completely understandable but how do we collectively curb predators?I can continue to hunt my known locations and explore more by all means, thats what I have been doing. By default exploring leads to time spent unproductively working an area in some aspects. I am more than willing to share areas of where I have had success or heard of problems with predators, if that areas becomes unproductive..mission accomplished for the time being..movin on!I know we (hunters) wont curb the problem by ourselves, DFW would need to change a lot (honestly who thinks they will change for the better??) but again I ask how can we collectively lower their numbers??
Quote from: LongBomb on October 24, 2022, 06:56:41 PMThanks for the info guys.Im going to go out on a limb here and say the whole predator problem comes across somewhat 2 faced.This was a sincere request and also a test somewhat. Did I expect anyone to immediately give up their predator honey holes?? Absolutely not, they have spent the time to find these areas and figure out what works and what doesn't. Most of us have limited time to hunt and want it to be as productive as possible which means limit competition, as one of the factors. On the other hand we cant scream that predators need to be thinned out yet stay tight liped about where they need thinned. I get it..its the entire state that needs help for sure. Also I know lots of people want to keep quiet because its where they deer/elk hunt and dont want to give that up. Completely understandable but how do we collectively curb predators?I can continue to hunt my known locations and explore more by all means, thats what I have been doing. By default exploring leads to time spent unproductively working an area in some aspects. I am more than willing to share areas of where I have had success or heard of problems with predators, if that areas becomes unproductive..mission accomplished for the time being..movin on!I know we (hunters) wont curb the problem by ourselves, DFW would need to change a lot (honestly who thinks they will change for the better??) but again I ask how can we collectively lower their numbers?? I have a life situation that is curbing my outside time... which I hope to someday remedy, but I digress.Suffice it to say that between 2008 and about 2015 I spent about one day per week from December to March chasing predators. About. Give or take. Mostly Cougars, and I'd take a bobcat that came in before I switched to Cougar vocals, but sometimes I'd get frustrated on the wet side with the low density cats, and I'd come to the dry side and call Coyotes. Usually did pretty good too.After all that, I don't HAVE any "honey holes." They don't work like that. At their own level, they pretty much follow prey density and disperse based on their species. Dispersion: Coyotes thicker and often in groups. (I called 7 at once on Lake Roosevelt one time, only got one because I made a mistake and waited too long.) Cats mostly individually, on very rare occasion in pairs, or in mother/cub groups, spread out by territorial aggression. Cougars way more space than Bobcats. Male Cougars bigger territories, Female cougars inside the male territories in smaller territories..... et.al. ad infinitum.....Prey Density: If there's no food in the area, they won't stay there. They haven't built houses and established school bus routes, they migrate. Look for food. I know of a Cougar that lived on 700 acres for 2 years, killed a deer per week... because the deer were there. I know hundreds of square miles that don't hold a single one. I know areas where there are about 2.6 deer per acre, but it's a dense neighborhood, and the cougars onle occasionally sneak in, make a kill or two, then escape, they're scared of all that activity. Coyotes territorialze fiercely, but in far more density. But they have to eat too. Locate cats by sightings, kills, and tracks (in the snow is easiest.) Howl for Coyotes, in the middle of the night... it's awesome! Or tracks, or dens, or roadkill (if you find an area - of interstate, for instance - with lots of coyote road kill, that's rare, and means something..... et.al.... ad more infinitum......Honey holes are not relevant to predator hunting.You need to learn your target species.