Tuesday February 9, 2010 
HOME
SUBSCRIBE
RSS
CONTACT US
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
SECTIONS
·  Regional News
·  Editorial
·  Forestry
·  Columns
·  Places & Times
·  Obituaries
·  Classifieds
·  Buyer's Guide

REGIONAL NEWS   Regional News RSS Feed
Last updated at 10:32 AM on 10/09/09  

A coyote was caught in a snare Sept. 7 in Hilden, Nova Scotia. A farmer estimates coyotes have killed more than 25 of her lambs this summer. The coyote was killed. (Photo published in The Truro Daily News)
A coyote was caught in a snare Sept. 7 in Hilden, Nova Scotia. A farmer estimates coyotes have killed more than 25 of her lambs this summer. The coyote was killed. (Photo published in The Truro Daily News)
‘An exceptional year for coyotes’ print this article

HILDEN, NS
BY JASON MALLOY
The Truro Daily News

A Hilden (Nova Scotia) farmer hopes her trouble with coyotes is over.
“We’ve had problems in the past but this year is an exceptional year,” Maggie Perry told the Truro Daily News yesterday morning (Sept. 7) after a fifth coyote in three weeks was snared on the family’s 300-acre farm.
The family raises lambs on the farm where Perry has lived for the past 30 years. About 20 years ago, it lost 27 lambs and Perry estimates coyotes have killed that many or more this summer, reducing their flock by a third.
There have been many sleepless nights during the summer as the howls of wolves and the cries of lambs rang through the rural setting on Irwin Lake Road.
“You feel hopeless sometimes,” said Perry, who has found the dead carcasses in the fields. “There’s nothing you can do.”
Walking through the fields often gives her an eerie feeling. “I can feel sometimes something is watching me.”
The predator, lurking for a quick meal, forced the family to make changes.
“Normally (the lambs) would be feeding off their mothers ... but we’ve had to move them into the barn and grain feed them,” Perry said.
Various people suggested different animals as solutions to keep the coyotes out but they were unsuccessful. They were only one aspect of the suggestions the family received.
“Our fences are up to standard ... (but) they dig a hole under the fence,” she said. “We’ve had everything but nothing works.”
About a month ago they contacted Harry Mowatt, a retired Department of Natural Resources employee, who showed them the proper way to set the snares. The family checks the snares regularly and kills the animals that are caught.
“Really and truly this seems to be the only way to go,” she said. “If the food supply is good they’re going to keep coming and coming.”
Perry estimates the family has lost about $7,000 due to the coyote attacks. It has been able to recover some expenses through the province’s wildlife compensation program.
“It does help,” she said. “They’ve been great.”
Bill MacLeod, the acting chief executive officer for the Nova Scotia Crop and Livestock Insurance Commission, said it had paid out $5,380 for 69 claims for ewes, lambs and rams until the end of August this year. The majority of the deaths were attributed to coyote attacks.
“It’s more than last year at this time,” he said of the number of claims.
But he cautioned that might be because the program is only in its second year and farmers may be becoming more aware of its existence. While the commission has received calls from across the province, MacLeod said most of the claims were from central Nova Scotia.
A Department of Natural Resources official said it has received about the same amount of phone calls this year regarding coyote attacks. —The Truro Daily News

10/09/09  


 
Recent regional news:




Past regional news :

February 2010 January 2010 December 2009 November 2009 October 2009 September 2009
August 2009 July 2009 June 2009 May 2009 April 2009 March 2009
February 2009 January 2009 December 2008 November 2008 October 2008 September 2008
August 2008 July 2008 June 2008 May 2008 April 2008 March 2008
February 2008

 




Weblocal - Search. Find. Share.

Are you searching for a product, a service or a local company?

Search
View January 2010 FArm focus


Email:


Email:






Click here to view our privacy policy.

A Transcontinental Media, Local Solutions Group site

This site is part of the Transcontinental Media Network


Daily Newspapers:
Nova Scotia: Amherst Daily News; Cape Breton Post; The News (New Glasgow); Truro Daily News.
Prince Edward Island: Journal Pioneer (Summerside); The Guardian (Charlottetown).
Newfoundland & Labrador:The Telegram (St. John’s); The Western Star (Corner Brook).
Saskatchewan: Moose Jaw Times-Herald; Prince Albert Herald.
Weeklies and Specialty Publications:
Nova Scotia: The Advance; The Hants Journal; The Kings County Register; Kentville Advertiser; The Annapolis County Spectator; The Yarmouth County Vanguard; The Digby County Courier; The Shelburne County Coast Guard; The Citizen; Nova Scotia Business Journal; Burnside News; Farm Focus; Springhill Record; Bedford Sackville Weekly News; Dartmouth Cole Harbour Weekly News; Halifax West Clayton Park Weekly News; Halifax News Net; The Atlantic Construction & Transportation Journal
New Brunswick: Sackville Tribune Post; ENBusiness.
Newfoundland & Labrador:The Charter; The Southern Gazette; The Compass; The Labradorian; The Aurora; The Beacon; The Pilot; The Packet; The Gulf News; The Coaster; The Georgian; The Nor’wester; The Advertiser; The Northern Pen.
Saskatchewan:Southwest Booster; SaskNewsNow; Coronach Triangle News; Grenfell Sun/Broadview Express; Oxbow Herald; Radville/Deep South Star.
Consumer Magazines:
Canadian Living; Elle Canada; Homemakers; More; Good Times; Canadian Gardening; Canadian Home & Country; Style at Home; Western Living; Ottawa at Home; Vancouver Magazine; TV Guide; The Hockey NewsMochasofaOccasions MagazineGolf Ontario StyleGolf EastGroup Travel Planner.
Services:
Weblocal; Merkado