Only one I recall being successful with was then marking a young pine and doing a kick back. I put the trap next to that young pine with no added scent and had a hind foot female a few days later
Most times when canines are doing kickbacks they are marking something within a few feet. Find what they are marking and set on it. At times they will pee on a lot of stuff and may or may not mark it the next time by, but if they are kicking and scratching, chances are they will mark it again the next time they visit the area.
Most kick backs i have seen were associated with breedin season. Have 2 travel crossins where we see um. Goin to try flat set w/turd. Thanks for suggestions.
Most kick backs i have seen were associated with breedin season. Have 2 travel crossins where we see um. Goin to try flat set w/turd. Thanks for suggestions.
More kick scratches down here in winter, but liable to see that behavior anytime of year.
They love to do it around scrapes for some reason. Every camera I’ve ever had on a scrape had coyotes visit, mark, and do that spin out. And the issue with setting there is obvious…have enough issues with deer as it is.
Example of a coyote kick back. This is from a series of videos where two coyotes feed on a deer liver I put out. The 1st coyote buries a left over chunk of liver, then the other coyote urinates on it and then proceeds to do a kick back.