Welcome to TheOhioOutdoors
Wanting to join the rest of our members? Login or sign up today!
Login / Join

Coyote baiting and trapping.

CJD3

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
14,854
215
NE Ohio
I have had a pair of them show up 2 times from spring to now on my trail cams. Always in the middle of the night. I realize that 2 can have some impact on the local food chain but to only see them show up twice in our woods... would that be considered a low number of sighting or typical of what you guys see?
I have never seen a "yote trail" type of run. I see most local critters use a common trail . Tracks are random as they move through a area.

What would be my options? Just calling?
 

twireman

Senior Member
2,927
149
Kingston, OH
I waxed and dyed the traps last weekend. Waiting till after this weekends deer hunting to put any out. Also waiting on some lure I ordered to come in.
 

xbowguy

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
31,189
260
Licking Co. Ohio
On a lot of Coyote and Fox snares.....I would put them in deer runs. Place a branch 2-3" in diameter across the trail 12-15" for fox and 18-20" for Coyotes.....Canines will duck under the branch and deer will usually jump over. I would have to look at a snare again, but I believe 6" circle is good for Fox and about a 10" is what I used for the yotes. Ya'll got me to gettin the itch again.......Coyotes and Fox in a snare is quite an experience! Some may be found dead already though.
 

Eye Spy

Junior Member
153
86
Willard, OH
I didn't trap this year, but the last few years I caught quite a few coyotes using a manure set. This is a very easy way to catch yotes. Start off by attaching 2 #3 coil spring traps to a 15 lb piece of firewood to create your drag (If you stake the traps in the ground, a lot of times the yotes are strong enough to pull the stake out). I then attach a 10' piece of lightweight chain to the firewood which will get wrapped around fences, logs, etc as the coyote pulls the drag. Find a high point on a travel route (farming lane, ditch, or fingers are great locations) and place your trap 10-15 feet off lane. I then dump a burlap bag full of horse manure from the stable over the firewood making a mound. Place traps around the edge of the mound and lightly cover with a very fine pieces of the manure/straw and spray with redfox urine. If I have a mouse, I will also dig a small hole into the manure and place the mouse in the hole. I always make two sets side by side (10-15 yards apart) because a lot of times the coyotes will travel in pairs. A couple years back, I only had 5 sets out and caught 8 coyotes the first week of trapping.
 

Gern186

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
10,415
215
NW Ohio Tundra
That is an interesting set up. How far away will the coyotes be usually after dragging the log around? Sounds fairly easy to do. Is the use of manure to help mask the human odor?
 

Diablo54

Senior Member
7,082
126
Outside
I didn't trap this year, but the last few years I caught quite a few coyotes using a manure set. This is a very easy way to catch yotes. Start off by attaching 2 #3 coil spring traps to a 15 lb piece of firewood to create your drag (If you stake the traps in the ground, a lot of times the yotes are strong enough to pull the stake out). I then attach a 10' piece of lightweight chain to the firewood which will get wrapped around fences, logs, etc as the coyote pulls the drag. Find a high point on a travel route (farming lane, ditch, or fingers are great locations) and place your trap 10-15 feet off lane. I then dump a burlap bag full of horse manure from the stable over the firewood making a mound. Place traps around the edge of the mound and lightly cover with a very fine pieces of the manure/straw and spray with redfox urine. If I have a mouse, I will also dig a small hole into the manure and place the mouse in the hole. I always make two sets side by side (10-15 yards apart) because a lot of times the coyotes will travel in pairs. A couple years back, I only had 5 sets out and caught 8 coyotes the first week of trapping.

What type of stake are you using that makes the coyotes pull out on you?
 

Eye Spy

Junior Member
153
86
Willard, OH
The distance depends on if they take off across an open area or head to the woods. I have followed a drag for close to a mile and have also found the yote 20 yards from the set. As far as the manure, you could use anything to create you mound (sawdust pile, soil, soybean shaft, straw bail) becasue it is basically just to catch the yotes eye. They are very curious and will want to investigate your mound. I use horse manure for a couple of reasons; 1. it doesn't freeze as fast as dirt. 2. it is fine enough to cover your traps 3. yotes can smell it. As far as stakes, I have never used a stake after hearing of other trappers losing traps to yotes. Last week my uncle was coytote hunting and killed one that was dragging a trap. The drag also prevents them from pulling out of the trap.
 

hickslawns

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
40,406
288
Ohio
I thought it was a requirement to stake them? I could be wrong. Maybe just the standard method but not a law? Educate me.
 

brock ratcliff

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
25,210
261
I just read the regs, and drags are not legal in Ohio. I wouldn't worry too much about that though. I don't think many WO are out buggin trappers catching coyotes this time of year.
 

jagermeister

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
18,295
237
Ohio
The distance depends on if they take off across an open area or head to the woods. I have followed a drag for close to a mile and have also found the yote 20 yards from the set. As far as the manure, you could use anything to create you mound (sawdust pile, soil, soybean shaft, straw bail) becasue it is basically just to catch the yotes eye. They are very curious and will want to investigate your mound. I use horse manure for a couple of reasons; 1. it doesn't freeze as fast as dirt. 2. it is fine enough to cover your traps 3. yotes can smell it. As far as stakes, I have never used a stake after hearing of other trappers losing traps to yotes. Last week my uncle was coytote hunting and killed one that was dragging a trap. The drag also prevents them from pulling out of the trap.

I've never gotten into trapping (at least not yet), so this may be a dumb question, but why not just figure out a better way to stake your traps down instead of using a drag? It doesn't make any sense to me why a guy would want to "follow a drag for close to a mile" when he could just stake a trap and not have to walk anywhere. What if a coyote pulls a drag a ways off and you have trouble figuring out which way it went? What do you do then? I mean, I totally understand the concept of mounding manure or other debris to lure the coyotes in, but couldn't you apply the same strategy while using a stake instead of a drag?
 

hickslawns

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
40,406
288
Ohio
I am not any sort of expert here either. I have some basic knowledge but have never trapped. I guess my thoughts are: If the yotes are pulling out the stake, then maybe get a longer one or double stake it? Got to be a better way. Not bashing on you. Just curious.
 

Diablo54

Senior Member
7,082
126
Outside
Just use a berkshire stake and you shouldn't have problems. However a medal stake or crosstaking and you might get pulled out