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Post by whitefeather on Apr 15, 2022 23:54:11 GMT
youtu.be/8wh9HlbJR1MWondering what you folks think. To me the ones in the beginning are almost certainly coyotes, but the last two (before they overlap them all into a mess) sound different. About halfway through they seem to drop into a lower, more guttural tone reminiscent of a much larger animal. At least that's what immediately came to my mind when I heard them. Is it just me?
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Post by somerandomuser on Apr 16, 2022 1:35:25 GMT
Yeah very sure coyote in the start.. the second one though is longer more frequent but there was something else around 01:28 before the guy speaks.. it sounded deeper and different. The second one in LBL is very similar.. something I notice coyotes and wolves all have a rather long howl like 4 seconds to 15 seconds, I am unsure what to make of it but just an observation. This is something I noticed too larger animals often do make some very low tones and it can actually be used to determine the size of something making a call.
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Post by Kiyona on Apr 16, 2022 7:08:33 GMT
Well my doberman puppy usually ignores wolf or coyote howls (unlike my german shepherd who feels the need to howl along with them), but this recording she was barking and growling...not sure if it means anything, she is maturing, and 8 months old now, so it could just be her personality coming in or perhaps there is something that dogs can 'read' from them. My gsd was just looking at the computer and doing the head tilt thing.
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Post by justjoetexas325 on Apr 19, 2022 0:52:27 GMT
I got much the same reaction of confused interest from my parents dogs, except one of the grouchier puppies who was clearly perturbed.
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