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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Photo explains smile on coyote’s face

A 13-inch-long hair-loaded scat -- apparently from a coyote -- was found the first weekend of April at Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge. (Tina Wynecoop)
A 13-inch-long hair-loaded scat -- apparently from a coyote -- was found the first weekend of April at Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge. (Tina Wynecoop)

WILDLIFE WATCHING -- Holy crap! While shed hunters are combing the woods for huge discarded antlers this spring, Tina Wynecoop scored this trophy scat at Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge.

I'd compare this animal's effort to Pavarotti belting out a glass-shattering high note until he turned blue and fainted. Bravo!

One trapper friend marveled at the continuous length and called it "a DOOzie."

"The long felted piece of scat was not shiny nor full of bone and teeth remnants," she said. "But, the nearby scat did and was more typical.  This piece is soft."

Perhaps it's a strip of hide from a deer carcass -- ripped away and gulped down much like Pavarotti might slurp home-cooked linguini.

Master hunter Tommy Petrie of Pend Oreille County Sportsmen's Club offered more clinical insight and comparison from his years of field experience:

I'd say it is a fecal plug produced from a coyote. Looks like deer (?) hair in the picture. I find a fair amount of these in the spring from bears around denning areas but they are usually always made up of grass, and glorious in size for sheer volume of stringy scat in one location (enough to fill a 2 gallon bucket).

In this case, if you see a coyote with a little extra spring in its step, you'll know the rest of the story. 

Incidentally, it's no surprise that Wynecoop, a North Spokane birder and nature lover, was captivated by the scat. In her words:

My first anniversary present from Judge (her husband's name), the logger, was a beaver skull.  I thought that was a fine gift.  On another anniversary I got a 'bouquet' of five different conifer species limbs, tied with  pink flagging ribbon, and a note that said, 'I log you, Tina.' "

One of our treasures is a Bald eagle pellet.  

Isn't life exciting!



Rich Landers
Rich Landers joined The Spokesman-Review in 1977. He is the Outdoors editor for the Sports Department writing and photographing stories about hiking, hunting, fishing, boating, conservation, nature and wildlife and related topics.

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