hntwhitetail
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2010
- Messages
- 1,455
flacowman said:Around here I would call that coyotes or natural death then maybe buzzards (vultures) got to him...coyotes woudl definitely be a culprit though as they eat from back to front.
CAB- the calf has a tag in the ear, so I am assuming it was alive...CAB said:Just from your picture, it looks like the calf was born dead and then predators started to eat it. Do you know if it was ever alive?
firesweepranch said:CAB- the calf has a tag in the ear, so I am assuming it was alive...CAB said:Just from your picture, it looks like the calf was born dead and then predators started to eat it. Do you know if it was ever alive?
But, how old was the calf? I would venture to say Coyote also, since they are active right now in our area. Usually they do no not go after live, healthy calves. Was the calf sick or down that you know of? When my daughter was very young, she had a pet baby goat that, while I was cooking supper, she took out of the pen and played with. When she came in, I asked her if she put her goat away and she said she had. I should have checked (she was 5), but got busy and forgot. Coyotes killed it during the night and just ate the rear end of it. My point is, the goat could not get away because it was tied to a fence, and up to this point had never been bugged by the beasts. Tying it made it vulnerable... we all learned a lesson that day.
CAB said:firesweepranch said:CAB- the calf has a tag in the ear, so I am assuming it was alive...CAB said:Just from your picture, it looks like the calf was born dead and then predators started to eat it. Do you know if it was ever alive?
But, how old was the calf? I would venture to say Coyote also, since they are active right now in our area. Usually they do no not go after live, healthy calves. Was the calf sick or down that you know of? When my daughter was very young, she had a pet baby goat that, while I was cooking supper, she took out of the pen and played with. When she came in, I asked her if she put her goat away and she said she had. I should have checked (she was 5), but got busy and forgot. Coyotes killed it during the night and just ate the rear end of it. My point is, the goat could not get away because it was tied to a fence, and up to this point had never been bugged by the beasts. Tying it made it vulnerable... we all learned a lesson that day.
You can tell I wouldn't make a great detective!!
ditto i think a cyote would have eatn more of it in order for survialRustynail said:Domestic Dogs. Killed for fun, didn't eat much, and went home to alpo. See quite a bit of it around here. Any tracks?