Bob Peters
Well-known member
These are as close to accurate as I can get. Some stats are tough to hammer down but I did my best to reflect the truth. I keep a detailed pheasant hunting journal to help me become a better rooster getter.
Days Hunted 28*
Roosters flushed (in range and also out of range) 58
Hens flushed 161
Misses 21
Bagged birds 10
Lost 3**
*This is more like to reflect individual trips, a few of which were only an hour long. For the most part I hunt as much of the day as possible, but I'd rather get out for a short trip rather than no trip at all.
** All 3 of these lost birds were hit hard and dropped but not recovered. In each case the bird dropped not very far away but either had legs and ran, was stone dead and left no scent, or survived and burrowed under thick grass. There was a different good dog with in each case but the rooster was never found.
I didn't keep as accurate of a journal last year but I shot at 7 roosters and didn't hit a one, so things went in the right direction this year. I learned a lot through a combination of experience and self-education by reading(this website and several good books on the subject). Although my game shooting is still sub-par, it got a lot better, and I ended the season with a sniff, flush, 1 shot, and perfect retrieve by the dog. I got a lot better at reading the dog, and although it seems pretty simple to do, the more times you see it in person the better you get at picking up on it. I got better at reading cover and analyzing seasonal patterns. I'm looking forward to next year and hopefully seeing things trend in a positive direction.
Days Hunted 28*
Roosters flushed (in range and also out of range) 58
Hens flushed 161
Misses 21
Bagged birds 10
Lost 3**
*This is more like to reflect individual trips, a few of which were only an hour long. For the most part I hunt as much of the day as possible, but I'd rather get out for a short trip rather than no trip at all.
** All 3 of these lost birds were hit hard and dropped but not recovered. In each case the bird dropped not very far away but either had legs and ran, was stone dead and left no scent, or survived and burrowed under thick grass. There was a different good dog with in each case but the rooster was never found.
I didn't keep as accurate of a journal last year but I shot at 7 roosters and didn't hit a one, so things went in the right direction this year. I learned a lot through a combination of experience and self-education by reading(this website and several good books on the subject). Although my game shooting is still sub-par, it got a lot better, and I ended the season with a sniff, flush, 1 shot, and perfect retrieve by the dog. I got a lot better at reading the dog, and although it seems pretty simple to do, the more times you see it in person the better you get at picking up on it. I got better at reading cover and analyzing seasonal patterns. I'm looking forward to next year and hopefully seeing things trend in a positive direction.