I’ve been solo calling specifically for cats over the last year, it’s a creepy feeling ending a set and walking out into the spot to retrieve your call knowing there easily could be a cat hung up where you don’t see it but it sees you. I guess you just have to risk it for the biscuit.I want to solo hunt coyotes, but I am hesitant to call as it will also bring in bears and possibly big cats…..
Listen to what this brother is saying, especially the part about not letting them see you or hear you or smell you on the way in! You'll know when you did because they'll start yippin' to one another to be aware, that they've spotted "an intruder". BUT... if that happens... make note of from what direction it's coming up. So that next time you come to that area... you work out a better way to sneak in from, where they can't see you or smell you before you get there.Actually headed out this Tuesday for a 7-10 day trip in N/W Nevada, I almost exclusively call solo. I'm retired so I can pick and choose when I go, best advice I can give is if you can get to your calling spot without being seen, heard or smelled you've won half the battle. Like others have said, scan with your eyes and not your head, iv'e hunted predators for a long long time and it still amazes me how good there eyesight is and how they can catch the slightest movement by the hunter. I carry two guns, AR in 223 and my shotgun, if there coming hard I just let em come and wad em up with 3" #4 buckshot, if they seem a little skittish i take my first opportunity inside 150 with the AR.