Colorado, Wyoming and south or western Nebraska have very good coyote hunting opportunities. Check the harvest stats with the respective Division of State Wildlife agencies on line.
I've had great success in New Mexico and Texas all because of the desert terain.
Western states are Colorado,Montana.
Eastern states are Georgia,Virginia,West Virginia,Kentucky,Alabama,Tennesse,Mississippi.
Midwest/north is Oklahoma,Kansas,Nebraska,Wiscousin,Texas,South Dakota,Ohio,Illinois,Minnesota.
Texas and kansas are best.
Thats for sure the top two.
Oklahoma is in the top 10 for sure.Maybe even the top 5.
Ideally, cold weather with snow that has been around for a while is best. Even better is if the snow has had a chance to melt a bit and then frozen again to cover everything in ice. Here is why:
The cold forces the coyotes to eat to stay warm. A hungry coyote is a cold coyote. The snow and especially ice make it difficult for the coyote to get at mice and other edibiles that it would normally feed on. Due to this, you get coyotes that are cold, hungy and desperate for food. These conditions make it an ideal time to hunt because the coyotes are going to be a bolder and careless. Bad for coyotes, good for coyote hunters.
Colarodo for elk
hunting is the answer
its mostly at night
Coyote
South Dakota is known as the coyote state.
Ohio
No. South Dakota's official state nick name is "The Mount Rushmore State". South Dakota is sometimes called The Coyote State because the coyote is the state animal.
The wily coyote will hunt in packs to catch larger prey, and adapt their hunting techniques in accordance with their prey.
Coyote Creek State Park was created in 1969.
"The Coyote State" is an unofficial nick name for South Dakota. South Dakota is home to many coyotes and the coyote is South Dakota's state animal which is why South Dakota is sometimes called "The Coyote State".
south dokota
I see no problem with a .35 for coyote if they are within 125 yards or so. You can get 150 grain ammo and stretch that out to about 200.
this states hunting regulations and rules are so messed up just go to Colorado or Montana