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<blockquote data-quote="SoonerP226" data-source="post: 2157742" data-attributes="member: 26737"><p>This is actually a field of (mostly) Midland-99 Bermudagrass; it has a dense root system that can go down to 12ft (OSU and MU developed it for this part of the country, so it's fairly drought-resistant), so the only "soft" areas are where the gophers have been. The ones where I'm thinking the coyotes have been are fairly round with narrow dig marks on one side; most of them a fairly round, with the main hole being seven inches or so in diameter, going down at a fairly shallow angle, maybe 30 degrees (with the surface being 0 degrees). There's also not a lot of dirt scattered around like a canine had been digging (other than at those narrow dig marks), which is why I'm thinking it's a burrowing animal like a badger or diller.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SoonerP226, post: 2157742, member: 26737"] This is actually a field of (mostly) Midland-99 Bermudagrass; it has a dense root system that can go down to 12ft (OSU and MU developed it for this part of the country, so it's fairly drought-resistant), so the only "soft" areas are where the gophers have been. The ones where I'm thinking the coyotes have been are fairly round with narrow dig marks on one side; most of them a fairly round, with the main hole being seven inches or so in diameter, going down at a fairly shallow angle, maybe 30 degrees (with the surface being 0 degrees). There's also not a lot of dirt scattered around like a canine had been digging (other than at those narrow dig marks), which is why I'm thinking it's a burrowing animal like a badger or diller. [/QUOTE]
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