| We decided that
I would call on the next stand. We slipped onto a little high spot in the sage that
overlooked the cow carcass and the area where we had watched the coyotes feeding. We both
felt confident about this stand. I started calling softly using one of my favorite Circe
calls. My eyes scanned the sage vigorously for any movement or sign of an approaching
coyote. After a minute or so of silence, I began calling again, only this time it was a
little louder. We waited and still didn't see a coyote. We continued this pattern for
about 20 minutes. When I was
through calling, my friend and I looked at each other in disbelief. We were both sure that
we were going to get a coyote to come in on that stand. On the way back to the truck we
discussed our strategy and decided to howl first on the next stand to see if we could get
a lonely coyote to come in, or to upset the ones that were already paired up.
We found another spot overlooking a
large sagebrush valley that looked ideal for calling coyotes. The sides of the valley
contained three or four juniper covered draws. I checked the wind again and made myself
comfortable against a dead juniper tree. When we were both set, I howled. We waited for a
couple of minutes and didn't have a response. I then resorted back to the rabbit call.
Only this time I used a Sceery call. I like to mix my calls up a bit so that the coyotes
don't get used to hearing the same call over and over again. We stayed at that stand for
another 15 to 20 minutes with still no sign of a coyote.
This pattern of calling continued
throughout the day. I think we made 12 different stands that day. Jim's calling was
sounding much better by the end of the day. When the day was over, all we had to show for
it was an empty stomach and a long walk back to the truck. We couldn't figure out what we
had done wrong to cause every coyote in the county to ignore us. With the amount of sign,
coupled with the fact that we actually saw them a few days earlier, we were sure we were
going to get them coming in. The question on our minds was, "Why didn't they come
in?"
The next couple days, I consulted many
of my calling friends and ran the events past them. I was amazed at the amount of
possibilities that I heard. I could write an entire article about why those coyotes didn't
come to my calls that day. I would like to list several that were told to me.
I was told that I had spooked the
coyotes out of the area when I had seen them. I was also told that I didn't have enough
camouflage, that they saw my truck, that I needed to call differently, that Jim's love
call scared every coyote in the county away, and that I used too much aftershave and they
could smell me for miles. I even had one old boy tell me that the atmospheric pressure
wasn't right for calling coyotes.
The truth of the matter is that no one
knew for sure why those coyotes didn't come in. Callers might claim to know why a coyote
didn't come in, and sometimes they might, but I have not yet found the secret to what is
going on in the brain of a coyote. If the truth were known, they either came in to our
stands and we didn't see them, or they were just not hungry enough after their buffet of
beef to come to a skinny jackrabbit dinner.
As I was thinking about the
conversations I had had with the other coyote callers, I became overwhelmed with the
amount of reasons there are for not having a coyote come into your stand. As I mentioned
earlier, I could fill a whole article on the reasons coyotes don't respond to a caller's
call. These are good things to think about. They help callers become better callers and
trappers to become better trappers.
When calling, hunting, trapping, or
whatever it is you like to do, keep in mind why you might not be having success. The key
is to try to eliminate as many reasons as possible. Doing this will put the odds of being
a successful coyote caller in your favor. By eliminating the reasons a coyote won't come
into your stand, you are increasing the reasons he will.
This will be a lifelong process for
callers. It has been for me. I am constantly thinking of things I can do to decrease the
reasons why coyotes don't respond to my calls. I know that if you keep these things in
mind, you will find your successes will increase, and your failures will decrease. You
need to remember that even though conditions might be perfect, a coyote just might not
feel like coming to your stand.  |