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Pheasants this winter, how are they doing ?


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I share the same sentiments Scott. However the only pheasants I've seen are in close proximity to Caribou and Traxlers (scratch birds).

The deer are also foraging very well. During a normal winter with 6"+ on the ground I normally see 15+ deer passing through the yard to forage in the corn stubble. This year they're staying in the valley feeding off the abundant acorn crop from last fall.

The deer that remained after last shotgun season are the healthiest I've seen in the 10 years I've lived here.

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I'm no wildlife manager but in years past I've fed the pheasants when the snows got deep, through ice storms, etc. This "winter" I had plenty of ear corn stashed away for them just in case. I've fed nothing save for a few ears for the blue jays & squirrels. Even they haven't eaten a lot of it, maybe a couple ears a week. The fields remain open and the amount of corn and beans on the ground after harvest in this area was tremendous. There are some roosters around yet that can be heard in the mornings and we see them occasionally. They aren't in the yard however so that's an indication to me that they've got plenty to eat where the cover is better and danger level is lower. I can understand organizations wanting to spend some money on corn but I can also see when experiencing a winter like this one, hanging onto it then selling it in the spring with the money to be put towards habitat.

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You may want to put a few of those ears of gold out after this weather system rolls by. Had somewhere in the neighborhood of 75 turkeys really feeding heavily this afternoon before the weather. 1 tom was puffed up big time, hope this has little to no effect on the pheasants. Got a bad vibe though in the heavy wind areas and if it's wet snow or not.

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I drove to lovely Avoca Mn yesterday took mostly back roads on the way down from Zimmerman and south of Hutchinson the snow began and it didn't let up for 2 1/2. Hours. Didn't seen one bird on they way down but I suspected the snow storm had something to do with it well on my way home I took a different route and I got to see one big plump Rudy he sure was pretty setting in thevnew fresh snow.

One bird in 424 miles of travel not that great but like I said it was a snow storm half the way down.

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We really couldn't have gotten a bigger weather break than we have SO FAR this year. We don't need any late season freezing rain episodes and prime nesting weather will be important, but this has been a much needed break for the wildlife (what's left of it anyway after the last couple years...).

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I drove up to Minnewaska yesterday morning from Montevideo, left around 8:15 a.m. I saw multiple birds, good gender mix, next to every piece of CRP/grass, cattail slough, and shelterbelt. On the way home from 4-5 I saw the same, except even more birds. I saw more birds yesterday than I have in the last two years, maybe combined. The snow may have concentrated the birds, but I think this has been a GREAT winter for the birds that remain, and we can make a big jump this spring with favorable nesting conditions.

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I was looking for woodcock the south of Lonsdale Saturday morning and my older setter locked up in some tall grass adjacent to the willows and alders. When I walked in to flush four pheasants flushed 20 yards down wind of us. I am sure they ran on my dogs. One was a rooster for sure. Not sure about the others but they were pretty close to each other. I hunted that spot a few times last fall and never saw a bird there so this was a welcomed surprise.

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It will take a few good years to get the population as good as it was a few years back. But anything would be better than last year. As long as we don't get any huge rains after the hatch there should be some young roosters this fall.

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