Tips and tactics for targeting high desert yotes

WKR

WKR
Joined
Jun 14, 2019
Messages
1,975
Now that my deer tags are filled, I'm wanting to switch gears a bit and start going after some predators. I'll be honest though I don't have a ton of experience with them besides calling some in on a few ranches we hunted as kids. I moved last year and finally have pretty much unrestricted access to huge chunks of land that's huntable. Im just not sure what my tactics should be.

So far I have made some half ass stands around 8am on where I had seen some sign, and what looked like some old calf kills. And was using the fox pro with female coyote and pup distress. I'll sit up high on a ridge, call and glass.

I haven't seen a single dog during those stands.

I know night hunts would be better but I'm not set up yet.

Also, I'd really really like to call in a cat. But I don't know how feasible that would be.

Any tips and tactics would be great.
 

Jtb.kfd

FNG
Joined
Oct 3, 2024
Messages
57
I hunt Eastern Washington heavily for coyotes. Its not high desert, but the tactics for the most part will remain the same. These comments are all based on daytime hunting, I do hunt at night but don’t enjoy it as much.

- I use sounds based on time of season (for the most part). This time of season I mainly use high pitched bird sounds first with rabbit sounds a close second. Sounds that replicate something getting attacked.
- Enter your area with the wind in your face. Seems obvious, but if you walk into an area where your wind blew into the area you are calling, things will be very difficult if not impossible.
- Choose setups that are near cover for daytime sets. Coyotes will bed down in areas of cover. In areas where everything looks the same, small breaks in that terrain such as swales or mounds change wind currents and seem preferable to them.
- I generally have a good first light set, then a lull for a couple hours. Very consistently things pick up from 10am to 1pm. I have found this to be common across multiple states/terrains.
- If I want a cat, I target them. For coyotes I call on and off for 10-30 minutes depending on location. For cats, I turn the caller on and leave it running non stop for up to an hour. I also have a decoy of some sort in the set. Be prepared to pass on coyotes in cat areas as they will generally come in first/faster.
- Try different sounds during a set and also from set to set. Meaning, I start with bird sounds and if nothing comes in after 7-10 minutes I will toss in a completely different sound like rabbit. Next set I may start with rabbit and end with bird. If I still haven’t had one respond, next set I would start with a group howl. That will generally give you an indication of coyotes in the area and where they are. Once they start howling back I determine how far away they are and move in closer. For slow daytime sets, I generally have found I am not close enough to them before calling. If you get close enough, any prey in distress sound should get them to at least take a look.
- In completely un pressured areas, high points with big views can work. In areas with human traffic of any sort I find more success setting up near or in brush where I have anywhere from 50-150yds of shooting lanes.
- Go out after dark in areas where you are finding sign. Do a group howl and mark where the responses come from and how many. Drive to as many spots as possible. Some areas that looked perfect to me, just don’t hold many coyotes for one reason or another. Or, they may use that specific area at a specific time of year and not use it as much at other times. This really applies to large, open expanse areas where their home range can be mobile from season to season.

Hope this is helpful. Ask away with any further questions, my family loves predator hunting and does it year round.
 
Joined
Feb 26, 2018
Messages
513
Location
Nebraska
If you can find cattle, coyotes are guaranteed to be close by. Haven’t got to hunt the desert, but I would be looking for pockets of heavy brush/low spots.
 
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WKR

WKR

WKR
Joined
Jun 14, 2019
Messages
1,975
I hunt Eastern Washington heavily for coyotes. Its not high desert, but the tactics for the most part will remain the same. These comments are all based on daytime hunting, I do hunt at night but don’t enjoy it as much.

- I use sounds based on time of season (for the most part). This time of season I mainly use high pitched bird sounds first with rabbit sounds a close second. Sounds that replicate something getting attacked.
- Enter your area with the wind in your face. Seems obvious, but if you walk into an area where your wind blew into the area you are calling, things will be very difficult if not impossible.
- Choose setups that are near cover for daytime sets. Coyotes will bed down in areas of cover. In areas where everything looks the same, small breaks in that terrain such as swales or mounds change wind currents and seem preferable to them.
- I generally have a good first light set, then a lull for a couple hours. Very consistently things pick up from 10am to 1pm. I have found this to be common across multiple states/terrains.
- If I want a cat, I target them. For coyotes I call on and off for 10-30 minutes depending on location. For cats, I turn the caller on and leave it running non stop for up to an hour. I also have a decoy of some sort in the set. Be prepared to pass on coyotes in cat areas as they will generally come in first/faster.
- Try different sounds during a set and also from set to set. Meaning, I start with bird sounds and if nothing comes in after 7-10 minutes I will toss in a completely different sound like rabbit. Next set I may start with rabbit and end with bird. If I still haven’t had one respond, next set I would start with a group howl. That will generally give you an indication of coyotes in the area and where they are. Once they start howling back I determine how far away they are and move in closer. For slow daytime sets, I generally have found I am not close enough to them before calling. If you get close enough, any prey in distress sound should get them to at least take a look.
- In completely un pressured areas, high points with big views can work. In areas with human traffic of any sort I find more success setting up near or in brush where I have anywhere from 50-150yds of shooting lanes.
- Go out after dark in areas where you are finding sign. Do a group howl and mark where the responses come from and how many. Drive to as many spots as possible. Some areas that looked perfect to me, just don’t hold many coyotes for one reason or another. Or, they may use that specific area at a specific time of year and not use it as much at other times. This really applies to large, open expanse areas where their home range can be mobile from season to season.

Hope this is helpful. Ask away with any further questions, my family loves predator hunting and does it year round.
I think a problem I'm having is their territory is so vast around here that I don't know where the X is. So I'm just picking spots at random, where really I'd like to be able to be within ear shot of them.

Everywhere I go there is sign, but that doesn't mean it's fresh. Is there a way to pattern them to know when and where they will be?
 

Jtb.kfd

FNG
Joined
Oct 3, 2024
Messages
57
I think a problem I'm having is their territory is so vast around here that I don't know where the X is. So I'm just picking spots at random, where really I'd like to be able to be within ear shot of them.

Everywhere I go there is sign, but that doesn't mean it's fresh. Is there a way to pattern them to know when and where they will be?
There probably is a way to pattern them but I have never figured that out. The chunks of public land I hunt range from 10k to 60k acres, massive areas to say the least. In those spots I have done a locating (group howling) to find where they are hanging out during the day. Just prior to first light or shortly after is a great time for this locating. I use OnX to mark these spots and then get in closer (150yds) to start calling. Over the years I have found stands that consistently produce, but they don’t look much different than the surrounding thousands of acres. The only exception to this would be denning season (Feb - April). During this time I look for hillsides/mounds or the thickets brush pockets you can find. That is where they will start digging dens, I mark those and then set up calling within 100yds in the mornings.

Knowing what they eat on the territory you are hunting can help as well. A call into a local biologist can give you a ton of info. The coyotes I hunt travel over these big tracts of land for food during different breeding seasons. That ranges from early mice/vole birthing just as snow starts melting, to chukar, snakes, elk and deer calving to bug swarms (crickets, grasshoppers). This all happens in different areas throughout the season and the coyotes will stay where food is most plentiful.

And, just when I think I have things figured out, I go out like a few days ago into an area fully expecting to get 6-10 and end up with 1 after a 6 mile jaunt. On that note, I do prefer to hike in and make sure I am using the terrain to not be seen if possible.
 

Jtb.kfd

FNG
Joined
Oct 3, 2024
Messages
57
I should follow up with, I have found massive chunks of land in WA, OR, Wyoming and Montana that look amazing, look like other area that produce, have some sign but just don’t hold many coyotes for some reason. Or, the population is low when I was there. I judge that based on locating howl responses and calling stands with no sightings. In that case I move on and keep finding more spots with higher populations. This changes year after year also. It very well could be you are hunting a spot that has a couple small packs of coyotes spread over a huge area. I wouldn’t waste time in these areas.
 
Joined
Sep 17, 2020
Messages
14
Don’t discount just because you don’t get coyotes coming in that there aren’t any. Might have been an area called out or educated. Some really good advice here on setup areas. I always have good luck during the day with a heavy brushed area nearby
 
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WKR

WKR

WKR
Joined
Jun 14, 2019
Messages
1,975
I should follow up with, I have found massive chunks of land in WA, OR, Wyoming and Montana that look amazing, look like other area that produce, have some sign but just don’t hold many coyotes for some reason. Or, the population is low when I was there. I judge that based on locating howl responses and calling stands with no sightings. In that case I move on and keep finding more spots with higher populations. This changes year after year also. It very well could be you are hunting a spot that has a couple small packs of coyotes spread over a huge area. I wouldn’t waste time in these areas.
I'd like to talk more specifics about my area but don't want to blast it all over the Internet so I'm gonna pm you
 
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