Coyotes turn Cobb suburb into killing field for pets (Hunters Needed?)

Howard Roark

Retired Moderator
Coyotes turn Cobb suburb into killing field for pets

By TAMMY LLOYD CLABBY
For the Journal-Constitution
Published on: 09/29/05

Mark Eskew was jolted awake by the ruckus in his backyard.

"I heard a cat screaming and hollering," he remembers. A couple of days later, while chatting with a neighbor about her missing cat, Angel, he found its collar at his feet.
ANDY SHARP / Staff
(ENLARGE)
Cinda Hamilton is surrounded by the family dogs, (from left) Molly, Stretch, Katie (top right) and Sophie. The Hamiltons used to have three cats that they suspect were eaten by coyotes in their Hardage Farm subdivision in Cobb County.

ANDY SHARP / Staff
(ENLARGE)
Nancy Steinichen cradles Skye, an indoor-outdoor cat who has evaded coyotes for six years. 'If we lost our cat, it would be a heartbreak,' Steinichen says. 'But she likes to hunt and be outdoors, and we would not change that.'

Such is life in the Hardage Farm subdivision in Cobb County: Here, cats vanish on a regular basis, and residents believe their pets are falling prey to coyotes wandering the streets.

While coyote sightings in metro Atlanta aren't rare, they're becoming more common — particularly with all of the region's new construction, as more homes encroach further on wooded areas.

That rapid development is changing the behavior of coyotes, says David Gregory, wildlife biologist for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, who keeps tabs on a 19-county area of northwest Georgia.

"Once secretive and coming out only at night, they are adapting to the urban situation, eating leftovers or going for trash," Gregory says. "So you might see them at 10 in the morning.

"They are generalists and can exist anywhere," Gregory says. "They eat anything from mice, rabbits and birds to Big Macs, pizzas — and certainly cats."

Last month a woman in Gwinnett County found a coyote on her front porch with her cat in its mouth. She screamed and the coyote ran off with her cat, named Gray Kitty.

In May, a 20-pound cat named Gus disappeared, and his owners in Gwinnett are sure only a coyote could handle a cat that size.

Then there was the man in Coweta County who was talking on his cellphone when a coyote sprang from a wooded area and snatched his wife's Chihuahua, Sweetie.

And in January, a coyote was trapped and killed by a wildlife removal company in, of all places, Buckhead.

A comfortable habitat

The stories are no surprise to Gregory, or to residents of the Hardage Farm subdivision, next to Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park.

With its nearly 3,000 acres of fields and woods and plentiful small wildlife, the battlefield provides a comfortable habitat for wild animals.

"We are the only place left with green space in Cobb County," says the park's chief ranger, Lloyd Morris.

"And Kennesaw and the Chattahoochee River National [Recreation Area] probably make up 60 percent of metro Atlanta's remaining green space."

They're perfect spots for wily coyotes to roam.

That means that in some places, such as the Hardage Farm subdivision, residents are seeing more coyotes than in the past.

"We've seen them running through the streets," says Eskew. "They know when garbage days are and they try to find food."

Cinda Hamilton, Eskew's neighbor, has lost three cats in seven years and will no longer have them as pets.

"There are constantly signs up about lost cats with a composite picture," Hamilton says. "One time we found a tail and paw."

Her family now has four dogs, and the two small ones are not allowed out at night.

"You hear them [the coyotes] howling at night and you can see them walking in the street on Parkside Trail [the road closest to the park]," Hamilton says. "Anybody who lives here knows about it."

But the design of today's neighborhoods provides ideal coyote habitats, Gregory says.

"We build subdivisions with small wooded areas nearby, providing natural cover for the coyotes and birds, and other small animals," Gregory says. "Rats and mice are attracted to the bird feeders in backyards, as well as garbage left for pickup near the houses."

'They are very smart'

While the vermin might be plentiful, the coyotes prefer cats, primarily because they're easy to catch.

The coyotes, on the other hand, aren't.

"They are very smart," says Cpl. Brody Staud, a police spokesman in Cobb County, where residents are allowed to borrow traps from animal control officers.

Most metro Atlanta counties refer coyote calls to the state Department of Natural Resources, Staud says.

"You won't believe what some trappers try to get them," Staud says. "But they won't go into the traps."

Are they a threat to humans?

"With wildlife you never say never," says Gregory, "[but] I've never heard of anyone here in Georgia being harmed by a coyote, though I have heard of some in California."

Back at the Hardage Farm subdivision, some residents concede that living with coyotes is the price one pays for living next door to the woods and popular park trails.

It's not uncommon, says Nancy Steinichen, one of the original homeowners in the subdivision, to see coyotes in packs of five or six. Nevertheless, the family keeps an indoor-outdoor cat that has survived for six years.

"If we lost our cat, it would be a heartbreak," Steinichen says. "But she likes to hunt and be outdoors, and we would not change that."

ABOUT COYOTES

• Coyote is a Spanish alteration of the original Aztec name coyotl.

The Latin name, Canis latrans, means barking dog.

• Coyotes are primarily nocturnal and hunt alone or in relays.

• They can run as fast as 40 mph.

• They feed mainly on rodents and rabbits, but eat most types of animal and vegetable matter.

• Smaller than a wolf, coyotes can weigh up to 50 pounds

• Coyotes mate readily with domestic dogs, and the offspring are called coydogs.

• Although captive coyotes have lived for 18 years, and one is known to have lived in the wild for 14 1/2 years, most probably live only six to eight years.
 

HuntinTom

Retired Moderator
I was sitting on the front porch here in Cobb County last Sunday morning before leaving for church when my little mutt dog started barking her head off -- I looked up and a whole pack of yotes crossed over the road right by my mail box! I shot one earlier in the year in the pasture out behind the house, and we see them about every other month or so...
 

SouthPaw Draw

GONetwork, GWF and NTWF Member
One quote in here that hits the nail on the head........

"Back at the Hardage Farm subdivision, some residents concede that living with coyotes is the price one pays for living next door to the woods and popular park trails."

If you live in a area with woods there will also be wildlife.
It amazes me that people think wild animals should not or will not incroach on their domain. PLus development is taking away the animal's area, people should expect to see even more wildlife as the big woodlots disappear.
 

raghorn

Senior Member
Another thing that usually always rings true is that most suburbanites oppose any form of hunting to keep wildlife in check until it directly affects them,and then it's a case of " why don't somebody do something?"
 

feathersnantlers

Senior Member
Can't kill them on Cobb COE land

They told us at the Cobb Corps Permit Holder's meeting not to kill them to just let them go.

Maybe this will raise a few eyebrows.
 

Mechanicaldawg

Roosevelt Ranger
Lord forgive me, 'cause I know it ain't funny, but I nearly spit coffee across the kitchen this morning when I read parts of that article in my paper!

(Sorry Sandra)
 

Meriwether Mike

Senior Member
I saw one go down the middle of my road one evening about 9 0'clock. I could have dropped him several times as he stopped when I hollered.
 

fishdog

Senior Member
Remember they were stocked. There was no poulation of them 15 years ago.
 

MCG DAWG

Banned
Maybe it's the redneck in me but you kill . . .

. . my cat and I'm declaring all out war on you. Been looking for a good reason to buy a WSM 223 and some Night Vision goggles and scope! Too many people just sit around and whine about stuff. I'd be knocking off every coyote in the neighborhood till someone told me to stop and/or fine me. Depending on the severity of the fine I may or may not continue hunting them.
 

Toliver

Senior Member
Guess with the Coyotes, we won't be needing "Stray cat season".
 

7Mag Hunter

Senior Member
Cobb County Coyotes

Gosh guys...Hope this does not get to the point where
folks begin to suggest birth control measures for Coyotes.....

My "birth control " measure is called "7mag".... :fine:

7mag hunter
 

Jim Thompson

Live From The Tree
I have a cat of about 10 years disappear a couple of weeks ago. I told Jill it was probably a yote:(
 

Toliver

Senior Member
Jim Thompson said:
I have a cat of about 10 years disappear a couple of weeks ago. I told Jill it was probably a yote:(

A shining example of why cats should not be allowed to roam free.
 

Buzz

Senior Member
Too bad they wont show up in my neck of the woods and eat some of these roaming dogs.
 

Jim Thompson

Live From The Tree
Toliver said:
A shining example of why cats should not be allowed to roam free.

This was our baby

10546263.jpg
 

redlevel

Senior Member
fishdog said:
Remember they were stocked. There was no poulation of them 15 years ago.

I have been seeing them in Taylor County since the early 1970's. I shoot one every now and then, but I don't believe they do as much damage to wildlife and livestock as wild dogs do. They will dig up peanut seed right down the row when you plant them, and they will bite into ripe watermelons. I have decided to quit shooting them unless one takes up residence too close to the house or starts hanging around my pasture. I believe they prey on a lot of quail nest robbers, and I wish they would eat every stray cat in Georgia.

I do believe they could become dangerous in a suburban setting.
 
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