I certainly agree! The best gray partridge, (huns), are in Johnson County, in my experience, they can literally be anywhere in that part of the state, but they are disbursed over a large quadrant of land. In Johnson, I have found them in creek bottoms as low as you can get, and touching the snow line 3000-4000 feet up, in really short pasture, or not at all! any weather line shack, machinery abandoned, or corral with some brush or cedars around is premium hun spots. The confounded thing with hun's. is they can be everywhere, and the next season are gone! Must be a boom or bust cycle. When you find them, they will routinely fly in a pattern and circle around to the same original cover, you will lose some along the way, and then sometimes flush wild a couple of times then settle down and stand for a pointing dog. Great bird, in the habitat, which is spectacular, and in hand, or the frying pan! In Johnson and that area you'll need to get permission from private landowners who either have the property deeded or have the access to public ground of choice. I have not seen all Hun's follow this pattern, but they sure have in Wyoming.