@@edgarmedina7689 "Animal Abuse" is cruelty to the animal whether they are domesticated or the wild, These hunters in the video use sniper-style weapon to finish off the coyote to protect the cows and make sure coyote died in seconds- personally I would call this 'the far range instance euthanize'. However, if these hunters were to use flamethrower on coyote, set them ablaze and let them run around while on fire then that would be a cruelty which fit the concept of "Animal Abuse". Sorry about grammar, I hope that makes sense.
@@mattshowalter9873 and not just farm animals. these things seem to have lost fear in urban and rural settings. I have seen them scale a 6 ft wooden fence and take off with a small dog in it's mouth. A lot more around here have taken up yote hunting to push back their numbers. There are wayy too many.
For those of you who are confused, these “innocent creatures” kill cattle, and pets. And when you spend thousands on cattle and pets, having a coyote kill them is heartbreaking. Hunting for sport is wrong, but this is anything but wrong. He’s killing animals to defend his pets and cattle, who are defenseless. Do not hate on him because he is hunting animals who kill his pets. He’s saving his own money and his livestock.
It is worth mentioning that coyotes are not invaders, but native animals. Our cattle and domestic animals were inserted, placed on a tray in the territory of the coyotes. This is not simply "defending" livestock, it is exterminating native wildlife.
@@NZMateus Now tell us where is our native territory and where are the borders of territory of the coyotes. Well - farmers are very territorial creatures I guess ;) I'm not some hunting maniac, but maybe this will help you to understand why people do this. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ldhAb7GJ7xc.html
Bruce Chapman all farmers i envy american bcz he can kill them in my nation there is lot of restricition owning even a long shot gun barrel.driving them out with fire with 6 people .
So when you kill a mom coyote do you just shoot her pups as well or just let them starve to death.......... if you guys really want to make a difference for our country why don’t you guys who think they are hot shot with a scope and a rifle go across seas and hunt the bad guys. Something that can actually shoot back and think...... I’m mean since your so blood thirsty......Oh I forgot... you just like victimizing the weak to make you feel like your worth something.
@@jt9544 you tend to shoot the pups too if they hang around your there to do a job this isn't about killing something for fun the farmers protecting his lively hood and his family you should read the description its really good explanation
@@jt9544 you are an idiot.shut the fuk up city boy.did your mommy not tell you that assumption is the mother of all fukups? It is uneducated morons like you who need their mouths sown shut.
I never watched channels like this before because I didn’t find the content relatable. Well, that changed for me this year when on Christmas Eve a coyote killed our family pet as he stood at our back door waiting to come in from his nightly pee break. I live within sight of the Boston Skyline and I will never look at coyotes the same way again. Please keep pushing the educational component of your videos. Especially to people like me who live in metropolitan areas. We don’t understand that coyotes are an invasive species that poses an ecological threat and I’m willing to guess that the majority of your nay-sayers in these comments are my peers. You will forever have my support and good luck in your endeavors. Stay safe and stay strong, Boston
Professor Mike AmericanuckRadio I’m sorry for your loss as well. I tried to shoot them after it happened. But I’ve got no skill, and it was just a cheap rimfire .22.
Doug MacRay, I'm sorry to hear about your pet. On Christmas Eve no less. I bet you wished you could have given that scum sucking coyote the treatment that these are getting in this video. Pop that sucker with a .375 H&H Magnum with high explosive ballistic tipped rounds. Ok, maybe that would be a little overkill, but it'd certainly get the point across. You don't mess with my kids, human or non human, without consequences! I'm also sorry to hear about all of you losing pets to coyotes. They become like your child and when they get killed, or get sick, die, it's like losing a child. I had a male Bischon Frise and Maltese mix that a larger dog in the neighborhood got a hold of and tore his back open pretty bad across his shoulders. It cost a lot, but they managed to reattach a couple of muscles, and suture him up with a latex drain tube in. He got better, then years later he got ran over by a car right in front of me. It's been a long time but I can still see him twitching, and that awful feeling of finality, knowing he was dead. That hurt, I was across the street and my Dad let him out to pee and he saw me and came running. I was the last thing on his poor little mind. I was so mad at my Dad for not taking him out on a leash. I also had a female Shih Tzu. The two of them were good buddies, and when he died she went into a depression for a while. She developed mamary gland cancer and tumors. The canine version of breast cancer. The largest tumor split open and got infected. She got septic and we ultimately had to do what we didn't want to do, put her to sleep. Put her to sleep, yea right, sleep. A more gentler way of saying we couldn't save her and it matastisized, and her septic from infection, so we had to make the choice to have them give her a lethal injection. I still miss them both to this day. They may not have been human, but they were my babies.
I can relate. We have neighbors who hate cats, and whose dogs (years ago) had been trained to kill cats (the owner bragged about it). We lost some of our loved little ones to the neighbor's mutts, and the damned dogs even killed and ate a litter of little kittens we were trying to save (all killed in our yard - and then thrown up in our side yard) - and calling animal control only resulted in threats (the officer immediately went over and told them we'd complained - rather than investigated or catching their loose dogs, and then told us we could do nothing to the dogs and if we did, we'd be put in jail). Their dogs were a problem for the whole neighborhood and the only good thing when someone finally poisoned them was that we were over 300 miles away the weekend they died and we could prove it. (They left "presents" - a front yard full of bloody diarrhea, but that was better than another much-loved kitty gone.) That neighbor insisted that his dogs had more rights in my yard that we did! (The animal control officer said that if we did anything that hurt the dogs we'd be arrested, but a few years later we learned that state law actually stated just the opposite to what the officer said.) The dogs, a pit bull and a rottweiler, also attacked a dog we had - tried to rip it in half. It cost us a lot of money to fix poor Buddy dog, and we ended up having my wife's folks take care of him. He eventually died, and I've always felt it was because of the move. My in-laws loved him, but... well, he was our dog. That was quite a few years ago - and those neighbors are still here and still a major threat to our family - a threat I can do nothing about. We've also lost kitties to poison, evidence indicating it was retaliation for letters to the editor I'd written. (I don't have freedom of speech in a local sense.) That also is a horrible death, and one you feel. People don't understand - it really REALLY hurts to hold a little one as it dies - and the look of terror and pain in their eyes (plus their cries that could be best described as "Please help me daddy!") - you do what you can, but the helpless feeling just won't go away. I couldn't help. Just thinking about it, decades later, makes me cry. It's almost too much to bear all these years later. I can see, and sometimes almost re-live their deaths. I miss them all. Yet people insist that I should "get over it" and "it was JUST A CAT!!!". You know what I'm talking about. As far as coyotes - I've heard another local cat hater speak up in their defense one time ("They're NATURAL!!!"), but the jackass has never lost someone he loved to the vicious attack of one of those animals. We're pretty sure we have, although the neighbor is also possibly a suspect. Thankfully, coyotes aren't that common in this area. I hope they never are.
Yelistener, when the white men came, coyotes were mainly found in the west and midwest and were very rare in the east. Wolves were found in the east, and the Red Wolf in the Southeast. Dogs also were common, as they were brought by some of my ancestors millenia before Europeans came over. We also know that in some cases, bobcats were raised and valued - the evidence being bobcats being buried with people and having evidence of being quite valued (I believe there is indirect evidence that they'd been raised by people). For someone living in Boston, a coyote does verge on being an invasive species, as it is native to the west and the evidence indicates unknown in that area until recent years. But then, you could define a lot of creatures and plants brought over from Europe as being so - cattle, sheep, wheat, and a great many other species - I've noted that a lot of people define "invasive species" as "an animal or plant I don't like but I like or value the others so they aren't invasive". We get that sort of thinking all the time with kitties around this cat-hating hellhole - but the same people who insist that our kitties are invasive, fuss about their rat and mice problems (most of the rat and mouse problem is due to introduced species). They go ballistic when we mention that their dogs and other pets (not to mention the plants and animals brought over) are also invasive to the eastern US (introduced from other areas by people). It's more than just protecting profits - reducing the coyote population also helps to protect our 'little ones' - and "invasive" is correct in that the original range of coyotes was well to the west of the Boston area. Do we not have the right to protect our own family and don't we have freedom of thought - just because it's not profit-driven, doesn't mean that it's not valid! (Many of the cat haters in this area want their precious kitty-killers protected even when they go into our yards to hunt our little ones, but at the same time want our cats impounded and killed because "cats are deh Debils pets!!!" They refuse to consider or admit that their favorite animal is just as introduced as the animal they hate.)
Tommy TwoGun yea, them coyotes would have separated that sweet little calf from its mother then killed it and eaten it. Good thing a guy was there with a rifle to pop those pesky coyotes.
I wish there was something like a safari, like people could go to a place like this, learn about firearms, and join in the hunt. that would be highly educative and fun. Thank you for the great video.
Big majority of those were the best shots I've ever seen. Clean kill no movement at all after the shot. Very humane nice setup and the perfect round. Very nice
@@franciskulchar2877 No dude the world is not going wrong right now, evrery century has their problems and a fews strange shit. But the world is not going wrong, it just follow the line and poursuit the évolution, cert with the humain kind that change some line, but the change Will poursuit with us or without us
AWESOME JOB ON CONTROLLING THIS PEST AND PROTECTING YOUR CATTLE !! HECK , IM FROM TEXAS AND RETIRED AND IF Y'ALL EVER NEED A FULL TIME CATTLE PROTECTOR/WATCHER , I'LL GLADLY VOLUNTEER DUDE , I WOULDNT MIND HELPING OUT A FELLOW FARMER/RANCHER ,IM RETIRED SO I HAVE ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD, ILL EVEN CAMP OUT 24/7 IF YALL NEED ME TO !! ✌️💚✌️
Love what you guys do, God bless. You guys are just unnoticed and without you guys we would probably pay more in the stores and have less mea on many levels and it’s amazing that you guys don’t really get credit for a very important and Vidal thing you do for yourselves, the nation and food supply. Definitely got my deepest respects and hope to teach my kids about the balance of life, care and conservation.
Pois é aqui no BRASIL temos algo pior que coiotes, os produtores não podem aumentar os rebanhos, GRAÇAS a PERSEGUIÇÃO de ambientalistas radicais de seu pais PRINCIPALMENTE .....QUERENDO QUE O MUNDO COMA INSETOS OU HAMBURGUER DE PAPELÃO .....
That optic sets the standard for all other thermals! The video out for these RU-vid videos is like watching a gen 3 wp with the targets enhanced. I’m doubling up my swearing for swear jar contributions and throwing all my spare change to fund my purchase. Good shooting, guys.
lotsa planning, expense, hard work scouting, late night in the cold,,and some excellent shooting,,,many thanks,,,i could watch these for days on end. I know you arent out to eliminate all coyotes but to help keep a happy balance,,,regards
I prefer to always call a Coyote what it is, and reserve the ‘dog’ word for our K-9 pals, so the ignorant NEVER get confused about whats a dog and whats a DOG. ..... and yes, that was a good shot!
Yea, I bet that high speed rifle round through the heart will clean a coyote's colon out in a hurry. Hunker down to take a crap and that rips through your chest and heart. I bet the bare down was enough to crap all of the rest of that dump load out in one push. 😵💩
Amazing job sir ! Do you use a range finder and adjust turrets for each shot or do you wait for them to get in range. Because each time you hit exactly where that reticle is pointing. Skilled and ethical shooter, great job !
I was raised in Southwest Tx. Worked in Encinal, saw coyotes as big as these. These are healthy and strong. They move steady for the young animals. Nice shooting and that one long shot went with all your shots. Either them or the herd.
im not vegan at all, in fact, i hate vegans but also everything related to guns and haunting propaganda. Protect livestock by killing coyotes ? my ass. there are other ways.
I'm vegan and I liked this, for each koyote dead is multiple cows saved. (Yeah these cows may be killed for food anyways but they won't have to get brutally eaten alive
Too bad the caliber restriction did not allow 6.5mm The 6.5x55 Swede, and 6.5 Credmore are super-flat shooters at great distance. In closer range a standard AR fitted with 6.5 Grendel would be a nice choice over .223. Oh well, this is FAR better than heavy restrictions. Nice work guys!
Jennifer WhiteWolf my father had a 6.5 x 55 Norwegian Craig ( Un Sporterized ) . I had the pleasure of shooting it a few times. Absolutely awesome rifle & caliber . I'm a HUGE 7mm Rem Mag fan as well. I had a Browning A- Bolt ll in 7mm mag with the BOSS system on it. Shepherd scope 4x16 X 50 w/1000 yard range finder. A nail driver at 100yards & head shots at 300 & heart shots at 500 no probs.
Governo bolsonaro deveria investir nessa tecnologia. E dar aval para eliminar esses bandidos na calada da noite. Só montar base em pontos estratégicos. E condecorar quem matar mais
@@фкШахтёрДонецк-г8б трохи не такими. Це мисливський приціл, але якість навіть мисливского дуже класна. Да і видно, що хлопці не перший день цим займаються
Congrats, you made just over 2 thousand snowflakes melt. Hahaha great stuff guys, keep it up. There’s a lot of time and energy that goes into a hunt like this, that stuff never gets filmed. We appreciate your efforts to bring us high quality video content. Thanks, and have a great Thanksgiving!
However if you've maxed out your melee combat skill tree you could raise that to about 70-100 exp per kill. Problem is that there are groups of NPCs that will wreck your shit if they catch you leveling up this way. PvP isn't what it used to be...
WAYY WAYY TOO MUCH FUN..!! When the coyotes tuck their tail & run it looks like a hyena seen through your FLIR scopes. We just need 100 more of you guys to thin out the out of control exploding population of coyotes.