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Top Ten Strategies for the 2011 Pheasant Opener

ROOSTER!

It’s no secret pheasant numbers will be down this year.  We’ve lost millions of acres of habitat and CRP contracts are expiring by the bushel.  We’ve also suffered through a long, cold winter and had it all followed up by an unproductive nesting season filled with rain in the north and drought in the south. 

 

All that negativity out of the way, this is pheasant hunting.  This is what we live for; days in the field with friends and family, good bird dogs, waving grass, amber sunsets and flushing ROOSTERS!  It’s pheasant season, the best doggone time of the year!

 

Considering all the factors in play this year, here are my “Top Ten” strategies you can employ to help put roosters in your vest in 2011.

 

1) Find Winter Cover this Autumn.  The 2010/2011 winter was brutal in the northern tier of the pheasant range.  We had extended heavy snow cover and sub-zero temperatures that significantly stressed pheasants living in areas with even good amounts of winter cover.  Consequently, when I look for public lands in Minnesota this Saturday for the state’s pheasant opener, I’ll be focusing on WMAs and WPAs featuring conifer shelter belts, big cattail sloughs, and large willow thickets.  My theory will be that these areas of good winter cover would have carried over the largest number of adult birds into nesting season, upping the odds that some hens would have been strong enough to pull off successful broods.

 

2) Follow the Dog.  This nugget is good advice any time of the season, but particularly important this year.  I greatly prefer to hunt in small groups of one, two or three guys behind a couple of good bird dogs, rather than in a death-march line of ten.  The biggest reason for my preference to hunt in a small group is the ability to follow the dogs wherever they lead.  They can put you on birds in places you never would have walked naturally.  Following the dog in a group of more than four people, however, is simply impractical and unsafe.

 

Farmers harvesting their crops can push birds into grassy spots.

3) Harvested Fields.  The beans have been coming out fast the last few weeks, while the corn harvest has been moving quickly this week across most of the pheasant range.  It’s no secret pheasants spend most of their day feeding in row crops.  Stack the deck in your favor by hunting grassy areas near harvested fields.

 

4) Walk Hard.  Lace up those boots and stretch out your hammies, because if you plan to put birds in your bag this season, you’ll have to burn some boot leather.  You can’t put a rooster in the roaster if you’re taking a truck nap.

 

5) The Golden Hour.  The best pheasant hunting of the day occurs during the last hour before sunset.  Birds move from food sources to grassy roosting cover during this final hour of the day, so it’s especially important for public land hunters to be in the field and not burn up their energy before this magical time.

 

6) Stay in the Zone.  It’s likely you won’t see the birds (in or out of shooting range) that you’ve experienced over the last six seasons, which is why it’ll be critical to stay focused.    Think about how disappointed you’ll be if after walking hard all day without having much action, two beautiful roosters flush in unison at the golden hour and you get off two unprepared shots.  Keep your eyes on the dog and your head in the game.

 

7) Go Mobile, Be Mobile.  With flushes fewer and farther between, expect to have to log more miles and visit extra spots. Most states have publicly accessible land available in map form that can be downloaded directly to your smart phone or GPS. If your traditional haunts aren’t panning out, give yourself extra options.

8 ) Get Your ID On. Anecdotal reports of late broods in parts of pheasant country have been trickling into Pheasants Forever’s office. This means some young-of-the-year roosters may not have put on their telltale colors, or telltale tail for that matter. There’s nothing wrong with taking a young bird, but don’t put yourself in a position to make a mistake shooting a hen – if you don’t know, don’t shoot!

 

The best time of day to pheasant hunt is general the last hour before sunset - The Golden Hour.

9) Walk Safe. Accidents don’t seem to care whether you’ve got one year of hunting under your belt or one hundred years. Review all firearm and field safety measures, and please carry Pheasants Forever’s “Code” with you afield:

As a member of Pheasants Forever, I believe in conserving wildlife and protecting the environment. I promise to leave the outdoors a little better than I found it. I will hunt safely and treat hunting on public and private land as a privilege. I will always ask permission before hunting private land. I will obey all game laws and insist my companions do as well.

 

10) Your Top Strategies? What strategies will help make your 2011-2012 pheasant hunting season one to remember?

 

The Pointer is written by Bob St.Pierre, Pheasants Forever’s Vice President of Marketing.  Follow Bob on Twitter @BobStPierre.

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11 Responses to “Top Ten Strategies for the 2011 Pheasant Opener”

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  1. Ask the Farmers; they often know where the birds hang out.

  2. Q says:

    7) Go Mobile, Be Mobile
    ” Most states have publicly accessible land available in map form that can be downloaded directly to your smart phone or GPS.”

    Can you tell us a bit more ? Are they on the DNR sites ?

  3. Q: Here is South Dakota’s website: http://gfp.sd.gov/wildlife/gps/default.asp
    You can find similar sits on Minnesota DNR, Kansas Dept of Wildife, etc.

  4. Q says:

    Thanks Bob – I found something, I am trying to see if I can generate the maps using the tools they provide… Thanks again for sending me on the right direction.

  5. JKruger says:

    Nebraska Pheasant Tips:

    In this day and age of the endangered ring-neck pheasant either:

    1. Buy farm stock and plant them yourself.
    2. Open the pocket book and pay an out-of-state outfitter.
    3. If you decide to walk those long and empty miles might as well shoot the hens too.
    5. Road hunt early morning because that is the only cover available in NE.
    4. Stop buying Ethanol fuel
    5. Implement a state-wide mandate that leaves habitat in place.

  6. Kurt Kelley says:

    JKruger
    Learn some Biology, and drop the cynical attitude.
    We don’t harvest hens for a real reason. They represent future population reovery where the habitat is suitable. I will turn you in if I see you doing it! Stocking birds is rarely a solution, maybe you’re wealthy, and if you want to just kill some birds (hens or whatever flies) this is for you. PF is the Premier Habitat based organization in the country, lets build on that. Road hunting is unsafe, unethical, and illegal, I’ll turn you in for that too if I see you doing it. In a state thats over 96% privately owned, statewide mandates are not a good choice, think it through.

  7. D Scherf says:

    One top strategy that I use all the time is to check my Pheasants Forever state website for banquets happening in the area I am going to. I get to hunt during the day and hang out with great people in the evening while supporting the world’s greatest pheasant organization! This often also opens up new places to hunt as I meet local farmers who welcome me to their place to hunt when I ask. Once and a while I even win a raffle!

  8. D Scherf,
    That’s an awefully good strategy. Thanks for your support of Pheasants Forever!

  9. PH says:

    JKruger – If hunting was only about bagging birds none of us would do it, it’s far cheaper just to go to the store. I won’t go into all the sappy reasons – because here I don’t have to. It’s fun following my dog to a point even if it turns out to be “just a hen.”

  10. J Spicer says:

    One of the biggest tips I will say is tip number 2 FOLLOW THE DOG. Trust your dog, you’ve put in the time and hard work in training, now is the time to harvest that. When you dogs wants to double back or veer to one side or another trust and follow. I can’t tell you how many roosters or “just a hen” my dog Hank got on point just by walking a little further or out of the way.

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