ky-oat here in ct. the explosion of animal wildlife has been epic. its said that coyote dna has around 22% wolf in it these days, and yes, they're breeding, a lot. at my place, its nothing to see 10-15 yippin at the moon. I've also seen bigger posse's, and individuals up near 70 lbs. black bear, fishercats, hawks, bald eagles, bobcats, big owls, and, literally, herds of deer (some 250lbs+)have returned to the forest where, only yesterday, rabbits, squirrels, and the like were it. also, tropical type birds are much more frequent. add in the snakes, big snapping turtles, herons, turkeys and turkey vultures, some really weird beetles, partridge or whatever, extra jumbo dragon flies, and its become ….. a circus. the interesting thing is the tranquility of their co-existence, which I attribute to the sheer volume of food and water. their interaction is best characterized by a 'mornin' sam, mornin' clem..' posture. the only regular ornery s.o.b.'s are the white faced hornets.
back to the kyotes.. it seems their origination at my coastal peak involved positive socialization memories with us, and to this day, their patrol territory is everywhere on the spread--except for the residence and its immediate surroundings. they only come near to collect a dead squirrel or two that I regularly shoot cuz, you know, squirrels --the definition of varmint. those 'wolves' always seem to beat the rest of the predators to the chow line.
I've seen crow 'funerals,' sunbathing bobcats, 65lb beavers, black bears so picky that only oysters rockafeller will do, and a host of other sideshows, but the kyote? the wileyest of 'em all.
https://screenrant.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/coyote-and-road-runner-acme-rocket.jpg
ps. 'cow stares at a new gate.' awesomesauce. lol!