Over the past couple of nights here we've had a drama unfolding. Maybe
not big in the grand scheme of things, but to our ears and in our small
little world it's huge.
A new male coyote has come to town. For the past couple of nights we've
heard his challenge song around 5am. As it's still fairly warm here, we
sleep with our windows open and this newcomer (I call him "Bub") has
wakened us up each night.
Up on the rim of the valley we're in, the local pack holds a nightly
serenade, normally just around or after sunset. It's a very social time
for them. Coyote packs are normally small family units consisting of
mother, father, and last year's pups. They howl together as a social
event, to locate members of the pack who have gone hunting, or
(apparently) just for the fun of it.
We're still a couple of months off before mating season, but Bub is
apparently a persistent newcomer. The first night he woke me up by
howling his challenge down in the creek bed. It's a very aggressive,
short howl followed by a trilling noise. It's unmistakable once you've
heard it. When you're laying in bed at 5am and you hear it within a
couple of hundred yards, it will chill your blood.
The pack answers Bub with a series of aggressive barks and shortened
howls. I think they're telling him "Come get some, punk" because they go
on back and forth like this for a little while. Bub is calling out the
adult male in the pack and the pack is calling for Bub to come up to the
ridgeline to fight like a man ... er ... coyote.
Last night I heard Bub far off beyond the ridge instead of down in the
valley with us. He may be moving off to find some other territory. Not
sure, but the noise factor seems to be dying down. We'll see tonight.
On a sadder note, one of our cats is missing. She was a rather pampered
housecat we brought with us from Illinois. She had taken to roaming
around outside at night and was becoming harder and harder to keep
inside. As any cat owner knows, keeping a cat inside who doesn't want to
be inside is a real challenge. Nothing short of an airlock will do. She
has been gone about 4 nights now and almost all hope of her safe return
is gone.
Normally the local pack of coyotes stays up on the valley rim. We don't
see them down on our place or hear them. I've only once found their scat
on the far side of the pond. However, I think Bub might not have been
so accomodating. If our cat roamed too far from the house, she might
have been caught by an opportunistic coyote and been unable to move fast
enough to get to a tree. She liked to go into the treeline and mill
around, but I hadn't observed her going out too far before. Speculation
is useless but as anyone who has ever had a missing cat knows, it can't
hardly be helped.
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