10 Things I Love About Coyotes

Weave The Coyote opening Timmy’s beer. Credits to Timmy!

Today is Coyote Day in North America, and I’m celebrating by sharing this list.

1. They mate for life.
Coyotes form strong pair bonds and typically only find a new partner if one of them passes away.

2. They’re amazing parents.
There have been cases where the mother dies and the father continues raising the pups on his own—protecting, feeding, and teaching them everything they need to survive.

3. They’re very playful.
There are countless videos of coyotes playing—whether it’s in backyards, open fields, or even on golf courses. Their playful nature is such a beautiful reminder of their intelligence and spirit.

4. They’re truly wild.
Unlike their close cousins, wolves and dogs, coyotes have never been domesticated. They remain deeply wild and free.

5. They’re survivors.
Despite relentless persecution by humans, coyotes have endured and adapted again and again. Every attempt to eliminate them has failed.

6. They survived the Ice Age.
Coyotes made it through the Quaternary extinction event (the Late Pleistocene extinction), which wiped out many large species.

7. They’re unique.
Coyotes are native to North America. This is their home—they belong to this land.

8. They were here first.
Coyotes existed long before modern humans arrived on this continent. Their story is ancient and deeply rooted in the natural world.

9. They are sacred in Indigenous traditions.
Coyote is one of the most important figures in many Indigenous North American stories—often a creator, a teacher, and a powerful trickster who helped shape the world.

10. They’re beautiful.
There’s a rugged elegance to coyotes—their thick, multicolored fur, their alert eyes, the way they move through the landscape. But what makes them truly beautiful is their resilience. They didn’t just survive alongside human expansion—they adapted and endured.

Happy Coyote Day 🤍

If you enjoyed this list and love coyotes as much as I do, please consider signing and sharing petitions that help protect them. Every voice matters.

You can find a list of active petitions here:


https://coyotepretty.ca/2026/03/19/%f0%9f%90%ba-coyote-awareness-week-petitions-you-can-sign-to-help-protect-coyotes/

Project Coyote

3 coyotes in Mississauga. Credits to my niece.

It’s still Coyote Awareness Week (March 16–22), leading us to Coyote Day on March 23—a time to stand for coexistence, understanding, and respect.

Despite their resilience and vital role in ecosystems, coyotes continue to face widespread persecution through trapping, poisoning, and killing contests. 

This week, Project Coyote is sharing science, stories, and solutions to help communities live alongside coyotes peacefully—and to replace fear with knowledge.

If you feel called, you can take part here:
🐾 Take the Coyote Pledge + access the toolkit:
👉 Take the Coyote Pledge

And you can support their work:
💙 Donate: https://projectcoyote.org/donate
🛍️ Shop: https://projectcoyote.teemill.com/

Every small action helps protect one of North America’s most iconic and misunderstood wild canids.

Together, we can create a future where coyotes are not feared—but respected, protected, and allowed to simply be 🐺💙

💔 Justice for the Coyotes: Please Sign and Share This Petition 🐺

Recently, four coyotes near Lanigan, Saskatchewan were chased and run over by people on snowmobiles. This was not an accident. This was intentional cruelty. Two of the coyotes were still alive when conservation officers arrived, but instead of being given a chance at rehabilitation, they were shot because of their injuries.

I can’t stop thinking about how scared they must have been. Being hunted, struck, and left to suffer… it breaks my heart.

There is now a petition calling for justice for these coyotes, stronger penalties for wildlife cruelty, and better support for wildlife rehabilitation so injured animals are not automatically killed when they could possibly be helped.

👉 Please sign the petition here:
https://c.org/6YWzgVkK8Z
And please, share it everywhere you can. Every signature matters.

Sadly, this is not an isolated incident. I still remember the story of the wolf in Cody, Wyoming, who was run over and then tormented before dying. These acts are not “hunting.” They are not wildlife management. They are violence against living beings who feel fear and pain, just like our pets do.

Using snowmobiles to chase and run over wildlife is especially cruel. Animals have no chance. They are exhausted, terrified, and completely defenseless. This kind of behavior should never be tolerated or excused.

Coyotes already face so much persecution simply for existing. They are blamed, hunted, trapped, and killed — yet they are intelligent, devoted family animals who play an important role in keeping ecosystems healthy. They deserve protection, not torture.

Please, if you are reading this:
🤍 Sign the petition
📣 Share it with friends and family
🖤 Speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves

Let’s show that there are people who care, who are watching, and who will not stay silent when wildlife are treated with cruelty.

For the coyotes. For the wolf. For all the wild ones who deserve to live in peace. 🐺🌲✨