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Hunting & Fishing
Coyote hunting in Oklahoma
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<blockquote data-quote="imhntn" data-source="post: 2014480" data-attributes="member: 3755"><p>I start most stands with some lonesome howls on an open reed. I set the foxpro and decoy 30 yrds or so upwind or across wind from me. After the howls, I wait about a minute and turn on the distress. I mix it up with the distress and but like Lucky Bird, Lightning Jack, BayBee Cottontail and Kitten Distress. The sound does not seem as important as the location to me. My brother and I were talking about this yesterday. I have some great looking places with lots of coyote tracks that I have called multiple times and never called one in. I have found over the years that I can go back to the good spots and kill coyotes about every year. I have taken 2 off one place easy to get to near my house this year, one on each time I have tried it there. I like to have a buddy and make sure one of us is looking downwind but lately, the last couple years, it seems like more coyotes are coming at a dead run right up to the caller. Called 4 spots Satuday morning and called in 8 coyotes. 6 were in one bunch and they circled and winded us but the other 2 came right to the decoy. Nvrsatisfied is correct though in that everyone has their own system and they all can work. I just don't think the sound is very important at all. It is location and being a good hunter, playing wind and having a feel for where they will come from.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="imhntn, post: 2014480, member: 3755"] I start most stands with some lonesome howls on an open reed. I set the foxpro and decoy 30 yrds or so upwind or across wind from me. After the howls, I wait about a minute and turn on the distress. I mix it up with the distress and but like Lucky Bird, Lightning Jack, BayBee Cottontail and Kitten Distress. The sound does not seem as important as the location to me. My brother and I were talking about this yesterday. I have some great looking places with lots of coyote tracks that I have called multiple times and never called one in. I have found over the years that I can go back to the good spots and kill coyotes about every year. I have taken 2 off one place easy to get to near my house this year, one on each time I have tried it there. I like to have a buddy and make sure one of us is looking downwind but lately, the last couple years, it seems like more coyotes are coming at a dead run right up to the caller. Called 4 spots Satuday morning and called in 8 coyotes. 6 were in one bunch and they circled and winded us but the other 2 came right to the decoy. Nvrsatisfied is correct though in that everyone has their own system and they all can work. I just don't think the sound is very important at all. It is location and being a good hunter, playing wind and having a feel for where they will come from. [/QUOTE]
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