Coconut Creek Police Distributes Coyote Whistles After Recent Sightings

A coyote was recently photographed in Coconut Creek. {Courtesy Coconut Creek Police}

By Bryan Boggiano

The Coconut Creek Police Department is giving free coyote whistles to keep residents and pets safe. 

When a resident encounters a coyote, they can blow the whistle to scare them away. 

To pick one up, residents can visit the police department at 4800 West Copans Road.

All they need to do is go to the lobby, ring the doorbell, and ask the telecommunications staff for a whistle.

The lobby is open 24/7. 

According to Scotty Leamon, the police department’s public information officer, the department has been giving the whistles away at events for the past few years. 

The giveaway also follows elevated coyote sightings and encounters throughout the city. 

In March, police spoke out after sightings in Township Estates. 

At the time, they said coyotes are timid and pose no danger to humans. But during their mating season, between April and August, females can become territorial and protective of their young. 

While they eat small mammals such as mice, rats, squirrels, and other rodents, they can also be dangerous to pets such as dogs and cats.

On Facebook, residents reported sighting coyotes around Hilton Road,  Granada Village Condominiums, Indigo Lakes, and Winston Park Preserve. 

One resident, Vanessa Vidal, said her sister’s dog chased after a coyote only to get chased by a larger one. The incident happened in Whispering Trails. The dog was uninjured.

“She luckily scared them off, but it was close,” she said. 

In Winston Park, Mary McClintock said a coyote attacked and killed an outdoor 10-year-old cat that her friend and their neighbors took care of. 

She wrote on Facebook that the neighborhood started caring for the cat after her owners moved in 2021. 

They found the deceased cat’s head in a neighbor’s yard. 

In March, the police department gave a few tips for residents. These include: 

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