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Description
A jacket built around real North American materials and the realities of the land they come from. Khaki outer shell, full coyote fur lining, and a genuine coyote collar. Warm, substantial, and designed to age with you.
Why Coyote Exists In This Jacket
For much of the 1800s and early 1900s, U.S. counties and states paid bounties for coyotes. The reason was simple: protecting livestock and wildlife. When large-scale sheep ranching declined, those bounty programs largely disappeared. Population control slowed dramatically, but coyote reproduction did not.
Coyotes breed quickly, adapt easily, and now live in nearly every state. Without consistent population control, their numbers have expanded rapidly. Wildlife agencies across the U.S. continue regulated harvesting because unmanaged predator growth puts intense pressure on livestock, deer fawns, ground-nesting birds, and small game.
The decline of species like the Attwater’s prairie chicken, which has been pushed to the brink of extinction, shows how serious predator imbalance can become. Coyotes are a major predator of their nests and young, and population management remains a critical conservation tool.
This jacket uses fur sourced through legal North American winter harvest programs. Nothing farmed. Nothing wasted. Material that would otherwise be discarded becomes something durable and long-lasting.
Why Coyote Is Rare In Fashion
Coyote fur can only be harvested during a short window in mid-winter, when coats are fully grown and dense enough to use. Outside of that season the fur is unsuitable. This narrow harvesting period makes authentic coyote pieces naturally limited and rarely produced.
Availability depends entirely on that winter season.
Construction
A bomber built for real winter.
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Khaki outer shell
-
Full authentic coyote fur lining
-
Genuine coyote collar
-
Rib knit cuffs and waistband
-
Traditional bomber proportions designed for layering
Design Intent
American heritage clothing was made from what was locally available and built to last decades. Natural materials, honest sourcing, and practical warmth define this piece. This jacket follows that tradition.
-
Description
A jacket built around real North American materials and the realities of the land they come from. Khaki outer shell, full coyote fur lining, and a genuine coyote collar. Warm, substantial, and designed to age with you.
Why Coyote Exists In This Jacket
For much of the 1800s and early 1900s, U.S. counties and states paid bounties for coyotes. The reason was simple: protecting livestock and wildlife. When large-scale sheep ranching declined, those bounty programs largely disappeared. Population control slowed dramatically, but coyote reproduction did not.
Coyotes breed quickly, adapt easily, and now live in nearly every state. Without consistent population control, their numbers have expanded rapidly. Wildlife agencies across the U.S. continue regulated harvesting because unmanaged predator growth puts intense pressure on livestock, deer fawns, ground-nesting birds, and small game.
The decline of species like the Attwater’s prairie chicken, which has been pushed to the brink of extinction, shows how serious predator imbalance can become. Coyotes are a major predator of their nests and young, and population management remains a critical conservation tool.
This jacket uses fur sourced through legal North American winter harvest programs. Nothing farmed. Nothing wasted. Material that would otherwise be discarded becomes something durable and long-lasting.
Why Coyote Is Rare In Fashion
Coyote fur can only be harvested during a short window in mid-winter, when coats are fully grown and dense enough to use. Outside of that season the fur is unsuitable. This narrow harvesting period makes authentic coyote pieces naturally limited and rarely produced.
Availability depends entirely on that winter season.
Construction
A bomber built for real winter.
-
Khaki outer shell
-
Full authentic coyote fur lining
-
Genuine coyote collar
-
Rib knit cuffs and waistband
-
Traditional bomber proportions designed for layering
Design Intent
American heritage clothing was made from what was locally available and built to last decades. Natural materials, honest sourcing, and practical warmth define this piece. This jacket follows that tradition.
A seamless addition