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Michigan’s New Coyote Management Season Starts March 2

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Michigan’s Natural Resources Commission just greenlit a statewide coyote management season kicking off March 2 and running through October 14, a smart move to tackle surging coyote populations clashing with livestock, pets, and even urban dwellers. This isn’t some knee-jerk reaction—coyotes have exploded across the Midwest due to vanishing wolves, abundant deer carcasses, and human handouts, turning them from elusive scavengers into bold pack hunters that rack up millions in agricultural losses yearly. Hunters can now pursue them on private and public lands (with landowner permission where required), day or night using calls, lights, and even suppressors where legal, but you’ll need your base license plus any furbearer permit. Carcasses? Dispose properly to avoid attracting more pests—no leaving them for the neighbors.

For the 2A community, this is a golden opportunity wrapped in public policy gold. Coyote hunting demands the precision tools we champion: AR-15s in .223/5.56 for varmint work, bolt-actions with suppressors for stealthy night hunts, and rimfires for plinking packs on a budget. It’s prime training ground for new shooters honing marksmanship under real-world pressure, justifying expansions in rimfire ammo production and optics tech that spill over to self-defense scenarios. Critics whining about bloodsports miss the point—this proactive management protects ranchers’ livelihoods, curbs rabies vectors, and keeps suburbs safe, all while reinforcing hunting as essential conservation. Expect a surge in youth hunter recruitment and suppressor sales; Michigan’s move echoes successes in Texas and Ohio, proving armed citizens are the best stewards of our wild spaces.

The implications ripple wider: as urban sprawl squeezes wildlife, states like Michigan are leaning harder on hunters to fill gaps left by underfunded DNRs. This season could inspire reciprocal reciprocity for non-residents, boosting out-of-state 2A tourism and FFL business. Grab your gear, check those regs at michigan.gov/dnr, and hit the fields—coyotes won’t manage themselves, but you can turn the tide while exercising your rights. Stay vigilant; overabundant preds don’t vote, but they do vote with their teeth.

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