Consolidate your field gear without sacrificing vocal versatility using the Quaker Boy Double Dog 2-in-1 Predator Call. Engineered as a multi-functional standalone system, this advanced dual-sided mouth call allows hunters to shift instantly between aggressive coyote vocalizations and high-pitched prey distress sounds. The innovative Y-frame layout combines two distinct acoustic styles into one handheld unit, letting you run an open-reed design on one side and a flexible rubber-ended super-screamer design on the other. By carrying just a single versatile platform onto your hunting stands, you can seamlessly establish long-range location responses and transition directly into immediate, close-range coaxing sequences.
Operating this advanced predator call is highly intuitive, providing hunters of all experience levels with extreme tone and volume flexibility. Holding the unit correctly positions the open-reed howling channel on your left to project realistic, coarse coyote howls, yips, and challenge barks. Shifting your airflow to the right side engages the integrated bite-and-blow rubber chamber, which produces the piercing, high-frequency squeals, squalls, and frantic screams of a cottontail or jackrabbit under stress. By dynamically cupping your hands around the exhaust port, you can shape back-pressure to perfectly mimic the desperate, natural audio dynamics that draw the leariest old coyotes, foxes, and bobcats safely into clean gun range.
- Dual-purpose Y-frame design merges an open-reed coyote howler and a rubber-lipped distress call into one tool
- Left-side open reed recreates a full suite of natural coyote howls, yips, locator barks, and challenge tones
- Right-side bite-and-blow rubber chamber delivers high-pitched prey squeals and frantic rabbit distress squalls
- Ergonomic shape allows for fluid hand-cupping modifications to rapidly alter back-pressure, pitch, and output volume
Why It Outperforms the Competition:
- Instant Stand Adaptability: Why clutter your hunting vest with separate howling horns and distress pipes? The dual-channel body design provides immediate access to two entirely distinct predator-calling strategies on a single lanyard loop.
- Dynamic Pitch Blending: The specialized Y-frame layout lets seasoned hunters blow into both chambers or transition rapidly between notes, adding lifelike frantic energy and natural cracks to your distress sequences.
- Intuitive Variable Back-Pressure: The streamlined exterior profile fits comfortably inside gloved hands, allowing you to manipulate air choke smoothly at the exhaust to drop down from ridge-splitting howls to ultra-faint close-range coaxing whispers.
- All-Weather Playability: Built using durable, moisture-resistant synthetics and resilient rubber compounds that resist freezing, sticking, or losing acoustic pitch during demanding late-season winter predator hunts.
Technical Specifications:
- Brand: Quaker Boy Game Calls
- Product Model: Double Dog™ 2-in-1 Predator Call
- Model Number: 62616
- UPC Barcode: 040191626160
- Call Architecture: Dual-Chambered Y-Frame Combination Mouth Call
- Left Chamber Type: Open-Reed Vocal Channel (Coyote Howls, Yips, and Barks)
- Right Chamber Type: Enclosed Rubber-End Bite-and-Blow Channel (Prey Distress Screams)
- Primary Materials: High-Impact Acoustic Polymers and Resilient Flexible Rubber
- Target Species: Coyotes, Red & Grey Foxes, Bobcats, and Other Apex Predators
Frequently Asked Questions (Q&A)
Q: How do I correctly hold and position the Quaker Boy Double Dog call in the field?
A: For optimal control, hold the call so that the open-reed coyote howling channel is oriented on your left side and the rubber-ended super screamer chamber sits on your right. This standard orientation allows you to naturally pivot your airflow and apply precise lip or teeth pressure to the rubber distress chamber when shifting calling strategies.
Q: Can I modify the volume and tone of the rabbit distress sounds on this call?
A: Yes. By cupping your hands securely around the exhaust end of the Double Dog call, you can restrict or open up the airflow. Closing your hands increases acoustic back-pressure to create muffled, low-volume whimpers for close-in coaxing, while opening your hands lets the call run at maximum volume to cut through heavy winds and cover long distances.