Coyote - Lamar Valley, Yellowstone National Park, WY
Coyote - Lamar Valley, Yellowstone National Park, WY
Coyote (Canaris latrans), Adult
Driving through the valley one evening I saw this Coyote running alongside the road. I pulled over and walked a good distance from it, but with it for a quite a ways down the road, taking many photos as it ducked in and out of the shrubs and bushes. This photo was taken 10/24/25 at 4:20 pm.
WeForest Donation: $32 (What is this?)
Print Number: 1/100
Print Size: 3 × 3 in.
Total Dimensions: 7 × 5.5 in.
PHOTOGRAPH
Coyote (Canaris latrans)
The Coyote is a common resident of nearly all of the United States and Canada, excluding Hawaii. It is a member of the Dog family and a slimmer, smaller built individual than a wolf. Easily recognized by their nightly yaps and howls, they are primarily nocturnal, although they often hunt around dawn and dusk as well. From Rabbits to deer they hunt a variety of animals, eat the remains of animals killed by others, and will even forage for fruits and berries in leaner times. They are advantageous eaters. Similar to Wolves, they form packs with members all caring for the young, which are born in dens in hillsides. In Summer packs can break up more and then reform in winter months to seemingly take advantage of the better hunting of deer and larger game which are easier to hunt in snow.
LOCATION
Yellowstone National Park, WY
Established in 1872, Yellowstone National Park was the first national park in the United States. For 10,000 years before, the land was home to many Indigenous Tribes, and many more animals than inhabit the area today. A convergence of the The Great Basin, The Great Plains, and the Columbia Plateau, it is still a special place in this country with a wide array and abundance of life. Having been expanded and more heavily protected over the last century and a half, Yellowstone National Park today stands as the largest intact temperate-zone ecosystem on the planet, preserves over 10,000 hydrothermal features, more than the rest of the planet combined, and is home to the largest concentration of wildlife in the lower 48 states of the United States. That last fact is extremely evident when you are there in person. Although consistently a top 10 most frequented park with between 3 and 4 million visitors annually, the wildlife still exists in droves. I have never experienced the feeling of looking into the past that I feel when I am in Yellowstone. One truly gets a glimpse into the world that existed throughout the United States before this land became the United States. Animals interact with each other and exist in numbers that you simply don’t see throughout the rest of the country. I try to visit once a year to see the ever quickening changes and collect more photos of one of my favorite places I have ever visited.
FRAME
Pecky Cypress (Taxodium distichum)
Known as Bald Cypress, this giant of the swamp is native to the southeastern United States. It can adapt to thrive in a wide range of soils, including very briny, salty, and water soaked areas. The pecky nature of the wood is created by a fungus that attacks the tree and eats away at its truck from the inside out. When the tree is cut down the fungus dies and leaves behind the beautiful architecture of its destruction. All of the Bald Cypress I have used in my frames has come from different parts of Louisiana.

