Napping coyote reluctantly leaves perfect sunbathing spot on San Francisco patio

So much for letting sleeping dogs lie.

A San Franciscan woke up this week expecting to take in the city views from their outdoor patio — but instead found a “beautiful coyote” enjoying a nap on their couch.

The canine had made himself so comfortable on the elevated patio that it made zero attempts to flee when the homeowner approached.

The homeowner worried that the animal’s lethargic behavior indicated it was sick or injured and rushed to call the city’s animal control department.

It turns out the coyote just didn’t want to give up the perfect sunbathing spot.

“I arrived and made contact with the resident who took me to their backyard and showed me the coyote who was comfortably resting on a couch in their outdoor patio,” Animal Control Officer Mullen wrote on Facebook.

San Francisco has a population of roughly 100 coyotes.
Animal Care & Control San Francisco /Facebook

“I approached the coyote and started talking to him, telling him that it was time to get up. He looked at me, got up, took a big stretch and made his way to the edge of the yard.”

The coyote reluctantly walked to the edge of the yard, which was connected to a woodland area, and hopped back into the brush.

Mullen noted that the animal moved appropriately and did not appear sick or injured.

The homeowner worried that the animal’s lethargic behavior indicated it was sick or injured and rushed to call the city’s animal control department.
Animal Care & Control San Francisco /Facebook
The Coyote made zero attempts to flee when the homeowner approached.
Animal Care & Control San Francisco /Facebook

“The coyote looked like a young healthy male that was probably recently kicked out of his den and was trying to make his way through the city,” he wrote.

Coyote pups usually stay with their parents — who mate for life — for about a year and a half before they venture out on their own.

The fall and early winter is typically the time when the “yearling pups” start dispersing out of their home dens, looking for a mate to start a den of their own, the department said.

San Francisco has a population of roughly 100 coyotes, which are key to keeping the rodent population in check.

Big city coyotes are not out of the ordinary — New York City’s population recently “expanded their turf,” with several recent sightings of the four-legged friends in the Bronx’s Claremont Park.

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