mi650
WKR
There's a lot of truth here.Interesting responses. I'd say the common theme is vigilance goes along way. The longer your pet is left unattended in certain environments compounds the risk. Only you know your level of of risk.
It was said above but few pets know how to fight, you might think your xxx dog Is a beast but it's a housecat compared to a wild coyote. The best thing they have going for them is size(maybe) and you.
The guys with the curs and the ones running coyotes for sport with dogs don't just drop their dogs in the ring with a big healthy coyote and cross their fingers. It's a learned skill that needs developed.
I recall reading a book about how wolves were observed ripping the bellies of caribou open on the run so they would trip themselves on their own intestines and go down. Less risk to the wolf compared to wrestling a larger animal.
The only way to get better at killing, is killing. And ole Fido just isn't built for it.
Something else I read a long time ago; coyotes, and predators in general, don't want to get injured in a fight with dogs. They don't know where their next meal is coming from, but they do know that being injured will make it harder to get. Dogs don't have this problem.
When I bought my property, we had 1 dog, a 120 lb. lab. My wife asked if we should be worried about coyotes. I told her no, our lab was more than double the size a huge coyote. I was wrong.
ETA: I was wrong in my thought process, our dog didn't get killed.
Last edited: