Living with coyotes and other creatures
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Like it or not, we live in the midst of wildlife, even in Huntington
Beach. Or wildlife lives in our midst. It depends on how you look at
it. Some of us are thrilled by the wildlife around us, and some are
not. Partly that depends on how you view wildlife, and partly it
depends on how the wildlife is affecting you.
For example, it’s fun to see cute baby skunks parading behind mama
skunk. But it isn’t so nice to smell them. And it really isn’t nice
if your pet tangles with one and then comes into the house.
Raccoons roaming in your yard can be a pleasant sight, but it’s
not pleasant if they eat the koi or goldfish in your pond. It’s
interesting to watch an opossum, but not as interesting if it is
eating all the fruit in your fruit trees or the produce in your
garden. You get the idea.
During pioneer times, people systematically killed wolves,
mountain lions, bears, weasels and any other critter that might eat
something that they wanted to eat. Game animals weren’t safe either.
Pioneers hunted some game animals, such as bison, almost into
oblivion. They hunted others, such as the passenger pigeon, to total
extinction. Times have changed over the last hundred plus years. The
frontier is gone. There isn’t so much wildlife left, and what little
is left is mostly protected.
We think that people should enjoy seeing wildlife in their yards
or neighborhoods. But no matter how you feel about the animals that
visit your neighborhood, it’s against the law to harass or harm them.
It’s also generally against the law to feed them.
Feeding birds in your backyard is OK, but feeding coyotes is
another matter. Some misguided people do feed coyotes, but other
lawbreakers are intentionally setting traps for coyotes.
Coyotes live in Huntington Beach. That is a fact of life. Coyotes
have adapted readily to our urban environment and have found places
to den at Shipley Nature Center, Sully Miller Lake, Bolsa Chica, the
Huntington Wetlands and the Santa Ana River. Pairs of adult coyotes
are raising litters of pups. The pups grow up to become adults, and
in time they have pups of their own.
The world would be overrun with coyotes if there weren’t factors
that keep their population in check. Coyotes get hit by cars, develop
diseases, get parasites and sometimes starve due to illness or
injury. Their life in the wild is short. This is part of the natural
cycle of life, and we shouldn’t interfere with it by feeding them.
Coyotes are crafty hunters and highly adaptable. In the spring and
summer, they eat berries and fruit if they can find them. The rest of
the time, they’ll snack on mice, gophers, ground squirrels, rabbits,
insects and road-kill.
Coyotes are the top predators of our local food chain, and
therefore an important component of our ecosystem. Their occasional
choice of household pets for prey has not endeared them to some
people, but mostly they eat wild prey.
We’ve seen coyote pups at Shipley Nature Center searching for
something to eat, and adults strolling neighborhood streets at night.
A couple of years ago, we saw the red female coyote that dens at
Shipley Nature Center engaged in “mousing.” She peered intently at
the ground, ears perked, then pounced like a cat when she heard a
mouse scurry by. However, such sightings are fairly rare for us.
If we spent as much time at the Bolsa Chica as Mark Bixby does,
we’d probably see coyotes more often. Mark frequently walks the Bolsa
Mesa and environs with his camera, recording sights and deeds (and
sometimes misdeeds). We have Mark to thank for forwarding to us the
picture of a middle-aged woman feeding hot dogs to a skinny coyote.
The woman probably thought she was doing the coyote a favor by
feeding it, but she wasn’t. All she did was teach the coyote to not
respect or fear humans. The less frightened they are of people, the
harder it will be to scare them away. Feeding coyotes is not only a
really bad idea, it’s against the law.
Other people have reacted to coyotes in just the opposite way.
Instead of feeding them, they’ve put food into gallon containers with
narrow openings and left the containers out at Bolsa Chica. The
coyote sticks its narrow nose into the hole in an attempt to retrieve
the food and gets stuck. If it can’t paw the bottle off its nose, it
will starve to death. Maybe that’s the whole idea. Intentionally
harming wildlife is also against the law.
People need to learn to leave wildlife alone. They shouldn’t feed
wildlife, and they certainly shouldn’t attempt to harm wild animals.
Some people are concerned that coyotes are preying on their cats.
Although we can sympathize with the loss of a pet, cats should be
kept indoors. Cats that run loose outdoors kill an inordinate number
of birds, including migratory birds. Maybe coyotes are part of the
balance of nature to keep wandering cats in check so birds have a
better chance of surviving their migratory flight and reproducing
next summer.
Our advice in regard to wildlife is to just let it be.
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