Fliers warn of coyotes on Eastside
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Deepa Bharath
EASTSIDE -- A 17th Street resident who thinks a pack of coyotes
fatally mauled her cat has put up fliers warning neighbors of the threat.
Jo Hendriks said coyotes are a problem for Eastside residents year
after year.
“I know several people in this area who have lost their pets,” she
said. “That’s why I put up the warning signs after I lost my cat, so my
neighbors can be on guard and protect their pets.”
Hendriks said a neighbor found her 11-year-old cat, Stormy, a white
Himalayan with silver highlights, half eaten on a street corner.
“The police say this is a problem only for the Westside,” she said.
“But there are people here on the Eastside who have lost cats and dogs.”
Hendriks’ little white signs with orange letters caution residents
that “coyotes are feeding on Eastside pets” and that “they have been seen
in packs killing small animals.”
Michele Gourlay, a Santa Ana Avenue resident, said she was concerned
after seeing the fliers in her neighborhood.
“I have a small dog and I’m worried,” she said. “I’m especially
concerned if they are hunting in packs.”
City officials said they have received only one report of a coyote
attack in Costa Mesa this year.
But coyote sightings and attacks are pretty common this time of year
as the animals hunt for food, said Robert Bork, a Costa Mesa animal
control supervisor.
“Coyotes do have easy access to our city, particularly through the
Back Bay and Talbert Park,” he said.
Bork advised residents to keep small pets inside the house during the
late evening and early morning hours, when coyotes like to hunt.
“It’s also important to keep food sources like garbage bins away from
the street because it attracts the animals,” he said.
Bork said the city sends out warning fliers to residents if coyotes
are sighted.
“So far this year, we haven’t sighted any coyotes,” Bork said.
Until animal control officials take over, Hendriks said she is going
to continue warning her neighbors.
“It’s very important,” she said. “I think people have the right to
know.”
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