Tuesday, March 26, 2024

And People Wonder Why These Signs Are Being Put Up.

 Well,  it is the fact that the Coyote is being run out of his native territories by mass population grown. The Green Belts where most have managed to find home just keeps getting pressed until they have to take to the road, figuratively speaking. Up North, in formerly fields and woodlands, are now being cleared by miles, not just acres any longer. The Coyote is being forced South into the parks and open greenbelts in the Metroplex that leads to the Great Trinity Forest, some 6,000 acres of prime hardwood forest in the watershed of the Trinity River System. 

With increased building of highways, rail systems, new parks and recreation areas, the margin between the 20-miles to the Great Trinity Forest has narrowed even more in the past few years since AT&T built the trail network, the PGA Golf Course that was a temporary home to the Byron Nelson a few years back--- and the Horse Park just across the highway in far South Dallas strained even that area.  Frankly, I have walked part of the trail and realized about half-way into my three miles traveled at that point, that I should turn around and head back. Although, Dallas Police Bike Patrols do ride that part of the trails, getting help if needed would be worry-some at best.

Each of these images indicate a factor that is pushing the Coyote into the neighborhoods.







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Wildlife Images are interesting in urban nature settings.

                                           I still have to pinch myself that I caught this capture a few years back, like pre-Covid days. I ...