A Haverhill woman said she had a harrowing brush with the wild Monday morning when she was surrounded by coyotes while walking her dogs in a wooded area.
Mary Burke, 47, was walking her four Labrador retrievers at around 7 a.m. in an area off Groveland Road in the town of Groveland, adjacent to Haverhill, when she looked up and saw a coyote staring her down.
"I was talking on the phone to a friend when all of a sudden there was one, then there were four, and they surrounded me," Burke said. "As I turned around, I started crying. I said to my friend, 'Oh my God, I'm not going to make it out of here.' "
Burke called 911.
"We got a call that a woman was being aggressively followed by coyotes," said Groveland's police chief Robert Kirmelewicz. "She had four good-sized dogs with her, but [the coyotes] weren't backing down."
The police were able to locate Burke's exact position using their enhanced 911 system, which pinpointed her cellphone, Kirmelewicz said.
"The GPS feature proved to be a great tool in this instance," Kirmelewicz said. "If we hadn't been able to locate her, who knows what could have happened?"
The dispatcher was able to guide Burke out of the woods as officers rushed to help, but the coyotes kept pursuing.
"They followed me all the way out of the woods," Burke said. "All the while I was talking to my dogs, telling them to stay with me."
As Burke reached the edge of the wooded area, Groveland police cruisers arrived with sirens blaring, and the coyotes fled.
"It was the most scary experience of my life, and I'm a cancer survivor twice over," Burke said. "They were so close, I could've touched them with a pool cue."
Kirmelewicz said the officers did not see the coyotes when they arrived.
Burke said this experience has made her think that more should be done to control the coyote population.
"We used to do controlled hunts for coyotes," she said. "But that's not the case anymore, and the population is out of control."
Kirmelewicz said that while coyote sightings are not uncommon, it is unusual for them to act this way, and he urged people to take certain precautions when out in rural, wooded areas.
"I would suggest the best thing to do, if you're approached by coyotes, is to make a lot of noise to try and scare them off," he said. "And always carry a cellphone."![]()



