Goosemaster
Well-known member
I just watched a golden hour video, and he shot a released pheasant, and he gave his opinion on released pheasants, and that's exactly the way I feel about it. I am against released pheasants.
Thanks, I will watch the video.I just watched a golden hour video, and he shot a released pheasant, and he gave his opinion on released pheasants, and that's exactly the way I feel about it. I am against released pheasants.
In this video, I think this bird kind of flew right at him, and of course he just passed it and made sure it work of it, but he then realized it was a released bird so he gave a little sermon on released birds and that's kind of how I feel about it as well it just kind of rubs me the wrong way.Thanks, I will watch the video.
There are some people who would not get any pheasants, if they were not shooting released birds.Food for thought.I don't get it, it's bad to shoot a released bird but ok to catch a planted fish! what gives?
I'm not much of a fisherman but I don't think I've ever caught a released fish. I probably fish once a year.I don't get it, it's bad to shoot a released bird but ok to catch a planted fish! what gives?
The reason being that I believe it violates fair chase to raise an animal in a domestic setting where it doesn't forge survival skills that a pheasant hatched on the prairie will develop and subsequently release it to be "hunted". If anyone else wants to, that's their prerogative, but keep it off of our public lands.I don't get it, it's bad to shoot a released bird but ok to catch a planted fish! what gives?
The telltale sign is the hole in the pheasant's nares (nostrils) where blinders are attached when the pheasant is raised in captivity. There are other indicators, but that is the typical sign.How would you know if its a released bird versus a wild bird? I hunt in WI, so most of the birds I shoot are released birds by the WI DNR. Where I hunt there are also wild birds, see a lot of birds spring turkey hunting and chicks early in the summer. Released birds are very different then game farm birds.
Any bird that is born and raised in some facility, is a released bird.How would you know if its a released bird versus a wild bird? I hunt in WI, so most of the birds I shoot are released birds by the WI DNR. Where I hunt there are also wild birds, see a lot of birds spring turkey hunting and chicks early in the summer. Released birds are very different then game farm birds.
I guess I didn't know it was that noticeable. I actually found of photo from last year Dec 7 that one is defiantly farm raised and the other looks wild.The telltale sign is the hole in the pheasant's nares (nostrils) where blinders are attached when the pheasant is raised in captivity. There are other indicators, but that is the typical sign.
Lucas, I agree with your perspective. On the flip side, they taste the same coming off the grill and Whisky points/retrieves them the exact same way! One picture was a planted bird and one was wild... Whisky didn't care. LOLThe reason being that I believe it violates fair chase to raise an animal in a domestic setting where it doesn't forge survival skills that a pheasant hatched on the prairie will develop and subsequently release it to be "hunted". If anyone else wants to, that's their prerogative, but keep it off of our public lands.
I wouldn't put myself in a situation to catch planted fish, but if private businesses were going around dumping adult fish into public lakes, I'd be equally as pissed off.
It's easy for me to have the bias as I live in an area with a phenomenal pheasant population.Lucas, I agree with your perspective. On the flip side, they taste the same coming off the grill and Whisky points/retrieves them the exact same way! One picture was a planted bird and one was wild... Whisky didn't care. LOL
I wish I lived about 5 hours closer because it would be the Sage, Nila, and Whisky show!It's easy for me to have the bias as I live in an area with a phenomenal pheasant population.![]()
Lucas, I agree with your perspective. On the flip side, they taste the same coming off the grill and Whisky points/retrieves them the exact same way! One picture was a planted bird and one was wild... Whisky didn't care. LOL