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Coyotes don’t play by daytime rules, and that’s exactly why so many hunters are turning to night stands and thermal optics. We sit down with Cody Sanchez of Thermal Dispatch to unpack what really changes after dark—why coyotes move more, respond harder to calls, and force you to rethink setups in Western Washington’s tight timber and mixed-use ground. If you’ve only seen wide-open prairie hunts online, this conversation reframes the game for ferns, logging roads, and urban edges where coyotes thrive but rarely show themselves.
We get practical about the tech curve—spotlights to red lights to night vision to thermal—and what each step taught us about pressured coyotes. Cody breaks down thermal palettes, detection versus identification, and why removing visible light prevents educating pairs that slip away and never forget. We also get clear about the law: where thermal is allowed for predators, where it’s banned for big game, how daytime heat affects performance, and why some states are rethinking rules as adoption grows. The throughline is simple—use the tool responsibly or risk losing it, because predator management needs effective methods.
From seasonal rhythms to pelt quality, timing is everything. Late summer into fall brings dispersal and the highest dog counts of the year; late October to mid-February offers the best fur; March denning can make responses slow and quiet. Along the way, we swap stories about striking color phases and tough-luck survivors that still answer a call. It’s a grounded, field-tested view of coyote behavior, ethics, and policy that respects fair chase while recognizing the real impact coyotes have on fawn survival and working lands.
If you care about calling, conservation, and keeping opportunity open, this one belongs in your queue. Tap follow, share it with a hunting partner, and leave a quick review to help more listeners find the show.
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By Aaron & Dave5
1212 ratings
Coyotes don’t play by daytime rules, and that’s exactly why so many hunters are turning to night stands and thermal optics. We sit down with Cody Sanchez of Thermal Dispatch to unpack what really changes after dark—why coyotes move more, respond harder to calls, and force you to rethink setups in Western Washington’s tight timber and mixed-use ground. If you’ve only seen wide-open prairie hunts online, this conversation reframes the game for ferns, logging roads, and urban edges where coyotes thrive but rarely show themselves.
We get practical about the tech curve—spotlights to red lights to night vision to thermal—and what each step taught us about pressured coyotes. Cody breaks down thermal palettes, detection versus identification, and why removing visible light prevents educating pairs that slip away and never forget. We also get clear about the law: where thermal is allowed for predators, where it’s banned for big game, how daytime heat affects performance, and why some states are rethinking rules as adoption grows. The throughline is simple—use the tool responsibly or risk losing it, because predator management needs effective methods.
From seasonal rhythms to pelt quality, timing is everything. Late summer into fall brings dispersal and the highest dog counts of the year; late October to mid-February offers the best fur; March denning can make responses slow and quiet. Along the way, we swap stories about striking color phases and tough-luck survivors that still answer a call. It’s a grounded, field-tested view of coyote behavior, ethics, and policy that respects fair chase while recognizing the real impact coyotes have on fawn survival and working lands.
If you care about calling, conservation, and keeping opportunity open, this one belongs in your queue. Tap follow, share it with a hunting partner, and leave a quick review to help more listeners find the show.
Nilch'i wind checks nilchi.com
Nilch'i Wind ChecksSupport the show

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