cyclonenation10
Well-known member
This was sparked from a comment in another thread, but thought it may be worth its own thread.
Pheasants are the only thing I seriously hunt. I'll shoot a handful of bonus partridge and quail each year, but the primary focus is on pheasants.
They are tough to kill completely dead, at least for me. More often than not, it seems like the birds have enough energy to make one final push to burrow under some grass, or take off running like crazy.
I've always hunted with relatively good retrieving dogs, and I've gotten pretty lazy at marking birds down (usually the dogs are on them plenty quick).
If I didn't have a dog, I would venture to guess I would have lost ~50% of the birds I shot this past season, give or take. Obviously if you didn't have dogs you'd have to be much more selective on the cover you hunt and the shots you take, but what has been others experience who hunt without dogs? Does that 50% mark sound about right to you guys?
Pheasants are the only thing I seriously hunt. I'll shoot a handful of bonus partridge and quail each year, but the primary focus is on pheasants.
They are tough to kill completely dead, at least for me. More often than not, it seems like the birds have enough energy to make one final push to burrow under some grass, or take off running like crazy.
I've always hunted with relatively good retrieving dogs, and I've gotten pretty lazy at marking birds down (usually the dogs are on them plenty quick).
If I didn't have a dog, I would venture to guess I would have lost ~50% of the birds I shot this past season, give or take. Obviously if you didn't have dogs you'd have to be much more selective on the cover you hunt and the shots you take, but what has been others experience who hunt without dogs? Does that 50% mark sound about right to you guys?