Coyote Removal in Bedford, VA
Coyotes are well-established throughout Bedford and Bedford County, where the Blue Ridge foothills terrain, wooded lots, and open agricultural areas provide the edge habitat and travel corridors coyotes exploit effectively. They are primarily active at night, and their presence near homes becomes a conflict when poultry, small pets, or food attractants are accessible.
Animal Dispatch handles coyote removal throughout Bedford and Bedford County — inspection, deterrence, humane trapping when needed, and exclusion.
Coyotes follow scent trails and established routes. Trapping without identifying what drew them to the property — and removing it — rarely produces a lasting result. Our approach starts with understanding the specific situation before selecting a tool.
Bedford County's position at the Blue Ridge foothills gives it the rugged wooded terrain, creek drainages, and agricultural edges that sustain robust coyote populations year-round. They move along wooded corridors, field edges, and Otter Creek drainage networks at night, and their territorial howls carry across the county's mix of open and wooded land. Properties at the edge of wooded terrain — common throughout Bedford County — face the highest coyote pressure, particularly for outdoor pets and backyard poultry. Their primary appeal is predictable food sources, so attractant management is the most effective first line of defense.
Full property and perimeter assessment — tracks, scat, travel routes, den sites, livestock and poultry exposure, and attractants. Trail camera setup if activity confirmation is needed before committing to a management approach.
When coyotes aren't actively denning nearby or acting aggressively, deterrence — motion lighting, scent stations, audio deterrents, attractant removal — is often enough. Coyotes are intelligent and responsive to environmental changes.
Used when deterrence is insufficient or when coyotes are actively denning near the property. Camera-monitored traps ensure fast response. Pup presence requires careful timing — all family members must be addressed before the den can be closed.
Livestock and poultry enclosure assessment, perimeter fencing where warranted, and den closure once all animals are confirmed out. Removing the attractant is as important as removing the coyote.
- Secure poultry with hardware cloth — not chicken wire — on all sides including the bottom; coyotes dig and squeeze through gaps
- Bring small pets inside overnight — cats and small dogs left outside unsupervised near wooded edges face real risk
- Remove outdoor pet food, fallen fruit, garbage, and compost access overnight — reliable food sources are the primary coyote attractant
- Haze coyotes that approach too closely — loud noises, direct eye contact, assertive body language — to reinforce their natural wariness of people
- Block ground-level access beneath sheds and outbuildings before spring to prevent denning
- Never intentionally feed coyotes — habituation to human food sources is the most common driver of escalating coyote conflict
Coyote problem in Bedford?
Poultry loss, pet safety concerns, or a den too close to the house — we assess what's drawing coyotes to the property and build a plan that actually addresses it.
Schedule an Inspection — $75 Contact Us