Petersen's Hunting

Hunting

Subscribe | Subscriber Services | Forum | Store
   
Petersen's Hunting
  Subscribe Now!
  Give a Gift!
 Hunting
 Petersen's Hunting 
 
Big Game
Small Game & Fowl
Guns & Loads
Hunting Gear
Cook Shack
Trophy Photos
Hunting Links
Message Boards
 
 Game & Fish 
 North American Whitetail 
 Petersen's Bowhunting 
 Bowhunter 
 Wildfowl 
 Gun Dog 
 Fishing
 Shooting
 Your State
 Marketplace
 IMOutdoors.com



Song Dog Savvy

While electronic calls are becoming increasingly popular, old-school hand-held mouth calls can be used with deadly effectiveness.


True, high-pitch cottontail squalls and the low-pitch, gravelly jackrabbit squeals are traditional parts of the coyote hunter's audio arsenal. However, is being fluent in bunny enough to seal the deal each and every time you head afield?

"I do prefer an open-reed call," said Belding, a competitive goose caller who understands how to incorporate his hands, air pressure, diaphragm, back pressure, volume and other variables into his calling to get the sounds he wants.

"With practice, you can get a fawn-in-distress sound, which at the right time of the year [early to mid-June] can be very effective in areas with high deer and antelope populations," he said. "On that same call, you can get a jackrabbit by sliding your lips toward the stopper. You can get a cottontail by sliding your lips back and biting down a little harder on the reed. You can get a woodpecker, and, with practice, you can get tricky and get elk calves or cow elk in distress."


Efficient predator callers, said Belding, are well-versed callers, fluent in several different languages, so to speak, and able to present all at varying volumes and, perhaps most significant, with varied and authentic degrees of inflection or emotion. All of these elements, including mimicking the sounds of different prey species while at the same stand, can come into play.

"Never be afraid to try different sounds," Belding said, "even at the same stand. If you've been there for fifteen or twenty minutes, try something else. Maybe it will catch that dog's attention."

Your ability to blow a call ten different ways is no guarantee of success. This wisdom was imparted to me years ago by recognized call-maker David Hale.

"M.D.," he said, "most men don't realize that only 5 to 10 percent of turkey hunting is turkey calling. Five to 10 percent." Calling, he said, gets all the attention because that's where the glamour lies. Instead, hunters should concentrate on "knowing" gobblers first. Translation: Scouting, biology, patterning. The ability to use a call comes second. Within the scope of this story we can simply substitute "coyote" for "turkey," and, said Belding, there are countless similarities when it comes to what I'll call The Learning Curve.

"To become a good coyote hunter you have to learn to read the body language of that animal. Just like you'd read a flock of geese or a gobbler that's approaching your set-up," Belding said.

"People need to challenge themselves. We've been filming coyotes for the past eighteen months, and it's the toughest thing we've ever done. But it's taught us to watch and learn. When does a dog stop coming to a call? Why does he stop? How does he use terrain to approach a call? Is his nose elevated, trying to catch our scent, or is it on the ground trying to cut our tracks?

"It's important," Belding continued, "to understand that coyote hunting is a cumulative education process. The more you watch, the more you'll learn. And the better able you'll be to adjust and adapt when that dog does this or that."

Contact: Zink Calls - (877) LEG-BAND; www.zinkcalls.com.


 


 



Outdoor Offers