sandbur
5 year old buck +
I have had all of the pheasants in 3 or 4 sections during some winters. Probably most winters.Mix in a food plot nearby and you will have all the pheasants in the section!
I have had all of the pheasants in 3 or 4 sections during some winters. Probably most winters.Mix in a food plot nearby and you will have all the pheasants in the section!
I saw this as well stu. When I was very young and my family lived in the Kenosha/Lake Geneva area, I remember going on hunts along the State Line Road on the IL border. The birds were so thick you would have thought you were in IA or SD. It was nothing to walk one fenceline or alfalfa field and kick up a dozen different roosters and twice as many hens. 3 or 4 guys could get their 2 bird limits of roosters in an hour. Then came the urban sprawl and the idea that eliminating fencelines and tilling right up to the shoulder of the road was the new norm for farming, thus began the demise of WI pheasant hunting. Once we permanently moved to Juneau Co in 1980, it was primarily all put and take hunting, with birds supplied by the Poynette Game Farm to the local sportsman's clubs to raise and release them. Birds were dumber than a stone and would rather run than fly. I can't count the number of times our springer spaniel basically had one in his mouth before it would leave the ground. The hunting continues to be like this to this day, only worse because they raise and release less birds now than they did back in those days due to increased cost per bird.I witnessed the demise of the pheasant in WI. When I was a young kid we could pretty much count on walking our fencelines (75 acres) and getting a couple birds (if Dad and I could hit them anyway). By the time I was in my late teens/early twenties I could hit those same fencelines a dozen times a year and not see a bird. WI pretty much went to a "put and take" situation with pheasants sometime in the late 70's/early 80's. We called them "retarded Poynette chickens" because they were raised in DNR pens and about as smart as a yard bird. They'd hang up on the first fenceline they ran into and not know what to do. Winter survival was nil (due to genetics of the birds mainly). WI did go to raising wild strain birds from IA a number of years ago, and that was a pretty successful program on a very small scale....but the days of having decent pheasant hunting in WI (on any kind of scale anyway) are long gone (except on private reserves).
I fear MN is on that same path.