After 100 Years of breeding they have to be Coy-Wolves and They're bigger, around 50 to 90lbs and stand taller.
I would say that besides the Eastern U.S. many parts of the Upper U.S. that Don't have any Wolves, now have packs of Coy-Wolves.
I was talking with different people on my other pages and one gentleman had said that he lives in New Foundland and and they have big Coy-Wolves and had them for decades.
A Lady I also spoke with, she lives in Texas and she said they are in Texas and Mexico and some of them have bred with the Mexican "red wolf" and in Texas if you spot them, they have a reddish coat, but they are Coy-Wolves.
At this point, after about a Century of breeding, they must be everywhere and how can officials even say there are any pure-bred Coyotes,
by now I would think they must be near extinction, since they've kept at 1st breeding with wolves and then would create the Hybrid Coy-Wolf and then just kept breeding with another Coy-Wolf.
The few packs that are near where I live are only a few miles away from me and they are known to roam 10 square miles or more to hunt.
They most likely come in my town at night-time and they can jump 6 to 10 foot fences, nothing really would stop them.
I had noticed years ago, that we no longer have wild rabbits and that's one of the main food sources they go after 1st. and when that's done, it's Dogs and Cats, etc.
~BECKY~
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