Seeing them and hearing them is a plus, look for tracks and turds. They like to travel deer trails and are lazy like deer, if the fence is down they will go to that spot. I have a lot of ground that the yotes frequent but its hard to catch them when they are there. Yesterday I was following a fresh set of tracks in the snow along a river and the yote crossed the river. Sometimes its a matter of being in the right place at the right time. It sucks when the tracts of land are all broken up with different owners and you only can get permission to hunt one in a area. But I have called them off of neighboring properties before, especially when the neighboring property is prime yote territory. Check out the thickest cover and try to set up near it. IT seems around my area where the country is more populated the yotes only frequent the edges of wood lots more so at night. A buddy of mine has lots of pics of them at night on his trail cam but you never see them out in the daytime, I am yet to call one in from that property. They travel a lot at night to hunt to. They can cover a few sq. miles in no time.

Last Edited By: widow maker 223 Dec 21 09 8:27 AM. Edited 1 times.