Outfoxed Again

January 29, 2010

When I first started venturing out on my own with a firearm in hand, one of my favorite wintertime pursuits was to crisscross the fields of eastern South Dakota in search of red fox. Back in the 1980s there actually were quite a few red fox scattered across the Midwest. That’s changed today with the spread of coyote numbers. The two don’t intermix well. It’s kind of like hunters and anti-hunters. They just don’t mix well at parties, especially when wild game hors d’ oeuvres are on the menu.

In the case of coyotes and red fox, the coyotes try and drive the fox out of their territory and killing isn’t out of the question. Wolves and coyotes face a similar neighborhood dilemma, but surprisingly, wolves and fox pay each other little mind according to studies. Apparently their prey differs enough that they don’t feel threatened by the other’s presence.

I still see red fox in the Dakotas and even in my backyard of Wyoming, but coyotes definitely rule the roost. If you have the good fortune to have red fox in your neck of the woods here are a few tactics to try. The easiest is driving county roads and glassing open fields, fence rows and hedgerows for little red lumps dozing in the sun. Reds routinely lie in the open near their den and snooze. Once you spot a napping red, secure landowner permission and then get as sneaky as a fox to pull of a stalk.

I don't see any fox. I thought you said you were good at calling in these critters.

A second tactic is calling. The problem with calling is that you’re just as likely to call in a coyote today as a red fox. Even so, get out your calls, but think small. Red fox weigh less than 12 pounds so they look for smaller prey. Rodent squeakers, squalling birds, cottontail distress and jackrabbit distress all sound tasty to a fox. If you want to test a red’s curiosity try a fox in distress call, especially during the mating season that is spread between December and March.

Give reds a try this weekend, but be prepared to be outfoxed.

Mark Kayser

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Chris O'Leary January 30, 2010 at 6:10 pm

I loved the post. It promotes preditor hunting and may help get people interested in a vitail part of hunting that is over looked. I live and hunt in pa where we have a massive fox and coyote population. This is hurting the small game, turkey and deer hunting in the northern part of the state. Expecally when the average coyoye is around 40 to 60 lbs. It also has been now found that our coyoye poulation is actually a hybrid or wolf and coyoye. leaving them larger and seem to be more capable or taking out our big game in pa. I fell the more you talk about this subject hopfully will lead to more people getting involved in preditor hunting. In turn helping control the population in this and other states.

Chris O’Leary

Robert January 31, 2010 at 5:08 pm

Hey Mark, got a question, how much did you pay to shoot that buck on the cover a few issues back? Why do you think you get to run all over the dakotas shooting bucks that the locals never get a chance at because you are a big name writer? Does that make you feel good. Why don’t you just stay home and hunt where you live instead of stealing from the rest of us?

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