Kudos To All True Pheasant-Lovers!
Thx everyone, you are ALL a great bunch of top-notch guys on here!!!...I have posed my questions about weather-related pheasant survival to a bunch of you "well-seasoned old birds" (Ha-Ha), because as a relative newcomer to the pheasant scene I honestly did not know the answer & would never want to inadvertently do anything to hurt the overall-population/brood-stock due to my ignorance while out getting my kicks...
After a thumbs-up/"Go-for-it" during the last storm several weeks ago, I don't think we really jeopardized any birds - because that storm though harsh was rather short-lived, we waited until the first sunny day after the storm (with weather predictions for it to begin warming up substantially just a day or two later), & I also happened to notice that the birds were out in full force everywhere by mid-day all by themselves without any pushing or kicking by us!
I am not physically present in CO at the moment (thus, why I asked for the update), but according to all of the weather reports that I am able to access from afar - this current storm seemed quite a bit different - especially with it's LONG-LASTING nature! I still don't know exactly how cold, for how long, with how much wind, even apart from how much snow before it begins really taking a toll on the birds??? Nor do I know whether at certain times under certain circumstances maybe birds should be harvested that are probably just going to die under the harshness of the elements anyway - and/or when to totally back-off & leave them all alone so at least some brood stock for next year has a fighting chance to survive???

And yes, you are all most-definitely correct - these birds are much tougher & hardier than they sometimes get credit for - but neither are they supernatural 9-life invincible magicians! I'm just trying to do-right-by-em' in the midst of my newcomer's "pheasant fever" zeal!!!
Thank God, it at least sounds like maybe the deep-snow part of the puzzle is not nearly as bad in eastern CO as it is across SD and parts of KS & NE...Hopefully, the combined effects of bitter cold & high winds will soon come to a close now & not last too dangerously long-term. It looks like mother nature & a closed interstate for-a-time may have pretty much taken care of culling the too-many-hunters numbers during the worst of critical mass!...Long-Live those psychedelic cacklers & their brood-hen mommies!!! I know we all want them to fare well into the faraway future & beyond for our children & great-grandchildren!!! :cheers: