That1uncle1776
Well-known member
Im not pleased with the amount of birds ive saw this year, Im pretty free during the winter and can travel. What states would you recommend?
My nephew has a hookup on some private ground but im pretty sure they shoot crows and cow birds to fill their limit.Nebraska. My bucket list state.
Im not pleased with the amount of birds ive saw this year, Im pretty free during the winter and can travel. What states would you recommend?
My brother lives in KC. He never see's pheasantsNo need to leave right away. Any public land in Codington County is pretty much guaranteed limits. Once that gets boring & you're wanting a challenge, I'd try for some of them famous bluebacks in Kansas. Or extreme eastern Montana.
He must be on the Missouri side.My brother lives in KC. He never see's pheasants
No need to leave right away. Any public land in Codington County is pretty much guaranteed limits. Once that gets boring & you're wanting a challenge, I'd try for some of them famous bluebacks in Kansas. Or extreme eastern Montana.
Not what I meant but nice lolI havent ditch banged in a coon’s age. Need to go chat with the wife…
Rumor has it the Iowa farmers aren't fans of it, even though it is legal?Can you ditch bang in Minnesota or Iowa?
My cousin is a lawyerRumor has it the Iowa farmers aren't fans of it, even though it is legal?
In Minnesota, it depends on the municipality. Without knowing the local property laws, there would be a risk of trespassing. You can shoot from the road (for non-big game, and on non-interstate roads) so you could always wait for them to fly over. Public land ditches are okay too.
If someone in the know could publish which Minnesota towns/counties allow for it, that would be great!
You need to know whether the road you are on is owned by a township/county/state/federal, or is it an easement? If it's an easement the landowner owns to the centerline and can trespass you. 100% of the township roads in the two townships we own land in in MN are easement. 100% of the county paved roads in that county are owned by the county. County gravel roads in that county are a mix of easement and ownership. Good luck finding out what's what in the area you want to hunt.Rumor has it the Iowa farmers aren't fans of it, even though it is legal?
In Minnesota, it depends on the municipality. Without knowing the local property laws, there would be a risk of trespassing. You can shoot from the road (for non-big game, and on non-interstate roads) so you could always wait for them to fly over. Public land ditches are okay too.
If someone in the know could publish which Minnesota towns/counties allow for it, that would be great!
We go out there to hunt mule deer. One of the guys in the group was out there in June I believe, and said it looked like the greenest year he's seen in the last handful. I haven't verified by looking at actual precipitation reports. Last year, we saw tons of sharpies. Any ideas why the bird numbers are down? Hopefully the deer are doing OK with the EHD reports coming out of those eastern regions.Montana bird numbers were down in my opinion, this was my 6th year hunting eastern mt and it was the fewest birds I’ve seen. There are still a few but not like some other years.
I heard several theories, the one I heard the most was. They started out dry early then got a flood right about prime nesting time. I also heard hail. But I hunted pretty close to the whole eastern side of Montana and the numbers were down . Hail doesn’t hit the whole eastern side. Habitat looked good. Sharps were way down. Huns were probably just back to normal after being phenomenal last year. Pheasants were so so.We go out there to hunt mule deer. One of the guys in the group was out there in June I believe, and said it looked like the greenest year he's seen in the last handful. I haven't verified by looking at actual precipitation reports. Last year, we saw tons of sharpies. Any ideas why the bird numbers are down? Hopefully the deer are doing OK with the EHD reports coming out of those eastern regions.