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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

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Dogs not welcome near South Hill bluff coyote den

Don't run from a coyote, experts say. Remember your place on the food chain, and shout or chase the animal.
 (Rich Landers / The Spokesman-Review)
Don't run from a coyote, experts say. Remember your place on the food chain, and shout or chase the animal. (Rich Landers / The Spokesman-Review)

WILDLIFE -- Coyotes defending a den of pups are not tolerating dogs coming through their territory between High Drive and Hangman Creek.

After my story about a Thursday attack on a dog was published today, The Spokesman-Review has learned of at least three coyote attacks this week on dogs up to 80 pounds.

Coyotes generally weigh 30-45 pounds.

If you hike in the area above Qualchan Golf Course, keep your dog on a lease for awhile.

Read on for details.

All of the dogs have been off-leash but within sight of their owners.

Don Wallace, who regularly walks the popular South Hill bluff trails, chased away three coyotes Wednesday as they closed in and bit the tail of his wire-haired schnauzer.

On Saturday, he went back and spotted the source of the conflict.

“When we came to the same place, my dog was right beside me and I could tell when its ears went up that they were there,” he said.

“As three very healthy looking coyotes surrounded us, I saw six football-size, chocolate-colored pups scurry back into a hole that’s just 25 feet off the trail.”

Wallace said he, along with two friends and the dog, kept walking. “The adult coyotes ushered us away and when we got to a certain spot, they left and went back to their watch.”

Wallace said his 40-pound dog was not injured when coyotes nipped its tail on Wednesday.
Other dogs haven’t been so lucky.

Chris Larson was exercising Wednesday in the same area – roughly down the bluff southward from Manito Boulevard -- when two coyotes confronted his 80-pound Chesapeake-Labrador retriever mix.

“I saw the coyotes angling toward us,” he said, noting that one coyote stopped and stood still while the other sneaked around and bit Larson’s dog on the rear legs.

The coyotes disappeared as Larson ran to his dog, which required stitches to close the wounds.
On Thursday, Arch Harrison reported his two 60-pound Labs were confronted by three coyotes in the same area.

Two coyotes were at the nose and tail of one dog as he rushed in to scare them off before any harm was done. But he didn’t see the other dog suffering bites to the legs and chest. The dog required an expensive visit to the Pet Emergency Clinic, he said.

Larson said he called local animal control agencies and the Fish and Wildlife Department and was told there wasn’t anything the agencies could do in this case.

“It’s part of living with wildlife,” said Wallace, who’s seen this before.

“In 2008, coyotes chased my dog while we were hiking on the bluff trails, and it ran up and was killed by a car on High Drive.

“In 2007, a coyote picked up a dachshund I had at the time. The dog bit the coyote on the nose and he dropped it.”

The coyotes have made a good living on the South Hill for many years, he said.
“The three defending the den right now are very, very healthy looking,” he said.



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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