He
came to Linda in 1990, after a farmer who
was mowing hay had unknowingly gone over
his family's den, killing his mother and
siblings. The farmer gave him to a neighbor's
child, who kept him in a bed liner in the
garage.
When he was about two months old, the child's mother decided she wanted to get
rid of him and called to have him picked up while her son was in school. He arrived
at Linda's house in a crate. When she opened it, he ran out and jumped onto her
lap, licking and kissing her. This coyote pup had obviously been imprinted.
Noticing that his eyes were gray, Linda took him to see Dr. Ingram, then to eye
specialist Dr. Sigler. He was diagnosed as having nutritional cataracts, the
result of being raised on cows' milk instead of Espilac. Nothing could be done
for this condition, so he would spend the rest of his life with limited vision.
Linda named him Don Coyote, after the book Don
Coyote: Good Times and Bad by
Dayton O Hyde. Don has spent all his life at Southwest Wildlife-most of it with
Ashley, who was named by the fire fighters who saved her from the Cowboy Wildfire
in 1994, where she sustained permanent lung damage. They have been constant companions
and faithful mates for 10 years.
During his lifetime, he has become a celebrity of sorts. He was filmed howling
at sunset on Pinnacle Peak, and the footage was used in the opening for the Channel
10 news for several years. He was also in the National Geographic Special, The
Sonoran Desert: a Violent Eden, and has had a few small parts in other scientific
films.
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