KEOutdoors
Well-known member
Here was my last bird of the season. You can see how easy the shots have been, and how its impossible to lose a cripple hunting timber draws...
…and when it lands in a bean field.Here was my last bird of the season. You can see how easy the shots have been, and how its impossible to lose a cripple hunting timber draws...
I agree with you on an example of a guy saying he lost 10 birds in a week, they're not doing something right(obviously). The ballistics dept. is a whole topic unto itself, but someone who has put no time/effort into selecting proper shells/gun combination can wound a lot of birds(I found a 1 1/8oz. #6 steel hull freshly dropped on Iowa public land last Friday). Odds are the more you hunt, the better your chance of losing a bird, it's all about the sample size. Expand your view of pheasant hunting and look not just on where and how you hunt, but how others do as well. Remy talks about hunting switch grass so thick he can barely see the dog 10 feet away. Many on this board are in cattail country, and although always looking for goldilocks cattails, not too thin not too thick, not too short not too tall, there are times hunters, due to lack of hunting ground options, the presence of a healthy population of roosters, or masochism, choose to wade into mire's so thick and gnarly it begs the imagination why some would even attempt this. Shot selection obviously changes with cover type for the ethical hunter. Regardless, there are times when the bird isn't completely covered up by the pattern. Birds are winged, or hit too far back, etc. No one I've ever met tries to do this, it's just part of hunting. There are times when one walks all day, and finally the dog gets on a scent, and the bird flushes just a bit wild, you have a second or two to make a 45 yard quartering shot. Dead in the air is best, with a bird dog being your insurance policy. You can't expect people to shoot perfect every time, that's not the real world. You can expect them to have an appropriate load and be a well practiced shot, and make every attempt to recover the bird. A hunter walking thin linear cover in Eastern Iowa shooting a dozen roosters a year will have different experiences than a hunter further to the west chasing birds on large tracts of CRP and wetlands. Lastly, the experience of the hunter and dog plays a role. Try and remember your first season or two hunting, versus where you are at now? If you meet a new hunter with a young pup, and they lost a few birds, don't chastise them, try and give them good advice and a word of encouragement. Success doesn't happen overnight and everyone comes to hunting with different experience levels, mentors or lack thereof, etc. etc.I dont understand how people actually lose more than a couple birds a year. But you talk to guys who say "yeah we lost 10 last week, they run like rabbits when they hit the ground". I just dont understand it. I never had a bird come down alive this year, let alone run off. Few wing flaps from head shot birds is about it... I shoot close and have patterned all my combos to ensure I am not leaving anything on the table there. I am not a good shot... But roosters arent exactly hard to hit, especially after all those doves in sept/oct I just mentioned.
Its easy for your dogs to find every rooster when you drop them dead at 25-30yds...
I can definitely see a dog with a not so hot drive to find the bird losing track of a wounded rooster, i just dont understand how guys have so many wounded to start with.
Thats my point... I didnt lose any birds. I dont understand how that is so hard for others to understand?…and when it lands in a bean field.
I agree with you on an example of a guy saying he lost 10 birds in a week, they're not doing something right(obviously). The ballistics dept. is a whole topic unto itself, but someone who has put no time/effort into selecting proper shells/gun combination can wound a lot of birds(I found a 1 1/8oz. #6 steel hull freshly dropped on Iowa public land last Friday). Odds are the more you hunt, the better your chance of losing a bird, it's all about the sample size. Expand your view of pheasant hunting and look not just on where and how you hunt, but how others do as well. Remy talks about hunting switch grass so thick he can barely see the dog 10 feet away. Many on this board are in cattail country, and although always looking for goldilocks cattails, not too thin not too thick, not too short not too tall, there are times hunters, due to lack of hunting ground options, the presence of a healthy population of roosters, or masochism, choose to wade into mire's so thick and gnarly it begs the imagination why some would even attempt this. Shot selection obviously changes with cover type for the ethical hunter. Regardless, there are times when the bird isn't completely covered up by the pattern. Birds are winged, or hit too far back, etc. No one I've ever met tries to do this, it's just part of hunting. There are times when one walks all day, and finally the dog gets on a scent, and the bird flushes just a bit wild, you have a second or two to make a 45 yard quartering shot. Dead in the air is best, with a bird dog being your insurance policy. You can't expect people to shoot perfect every time, that's not the real world. You can expect them to have an appropriate load and be a well practiced shot, and make every attempt to recover the bird. A hunter walking thin linear cover in Eastern Iowa shooting a dozen roosters a year will have different experiences than a hunter further to the west chasing birds on large tracts of CRP and wetlands. Lastly, the experience of the hunter and dog plays a role. Try and remember your first season or two hunting, versus where you are at now? If you meet a new hunter with a young pup, and they lost a few birds, don't chastise them, try and give them good advice and a word of encouragement. Success doesn't happen overnight and everyone comes to hunting with different experience levels, mentors or lack thereof, etc. etc.
I’m not a disbeliever. If I was going to go online and lie, it wouldn’t be about pheasant recovery rates!Thats my point... I didnt lose any birds. I dont understand how that is so hard for others to understand?
The dozen I shot in thick waist high crp, and the maybe 10 I dropped in cattail/blue stem along cattle ponds were also dead and easily recovered by the lab. All the rest were wide open crop fields bordering timber or along creeks.
What will also blow someone on here's mind is that my dog found all of my hunting partners birds too. Except for one duck where he took the shot I told him not to, and dropped it in 8' tall reeds in the marsh. Couldn't even walk to it, dog tried and I dont think he ever made it to where the bird landed.
A HA! Got ya! You DID lose a bird!Thats my point... I didnt lose any birds. I dont understand how that is so hard for others to understand?
The dozen I shot in thick waist high crp, and the maybe 10 I dropped in cattail/blue stem along cattle ponds were also dead and easily recovered by the lab. All the rest were wide open crop fields bordering timber or along creeks.
What will also blow someone on here's mind is that my dog found all of my hunting partners birds too. Except for one duck where he took the shot I told him not to, and dropped it in 8' tall reeds in the marsh. Couldn't even walk to it, dog tried and I dont think he ever made it to where the bird landed.
A HA! Got ya! You DID lose a bird!
Frankly, I'm jealous of folks' lack of lost birds. I didn't lose any grouse or woodcock, but I lost more Pheasants than I should have. Both of my dogs had never hunted let alone smelled a pheasant before this year. The puppy had no idea what she was doing for the first month of our season. That plays a large role. And being that this year was the first time I hunted pheasants as an adult, I sorely underestimated how tough these birds were, and their ability to run. I lost two downed birds after the first 2 weeks of the season. The first two weeks I lost 4. Its a learning curve, and I know better for next year.
Yes I know. I was poking fun since it was your dpg.No I didnt? My buddy did. Read my last part on shot selection. Take stupid shots, expect stupid results.
A HA! Got ya! You DID lose a bird!
Frankly, I'm jealous of folks' lack of lost birds. I didn't lose any grouse or woodcock, but I lost more Pheasants than I should have. Both of my dogs had never hunted let alone smelled a pheasant before this year. The puppy had no idea what she was doing for the first month of our season. That plays a large role. And being that this year was the first time I hunted pheasants as an adult, I sorely underestimated how tough these birds were, and their ability to run. I lost two downed birds after the first 2 weeks of the season. The first two weeks I lost 4. Its a learning curve, and I know better for next year.
@KEOutdoors From all the posts, what I'm more curious now is how many birds you lost years ago when you were starting out? You say you don't understand how people lose birds, but unless you are saying you have never lost any in your lifetime, then you really should understand.
I think you don't understand how privileged you are to be able to hunt 400+ birds in a season. And I would hope that you have gotten way way better at hunting than those that maybe chase 10 a season. But the key is to not discourage those who do cripple simply because they are inexperienced. As long as everyone is trying to cripple less than they have before, I think that's all that we can really do without knowing their situation.
Not all of them are.Bottom line, dogs are the hero’s, and the source of the greatest joys while hunting!
I‘m only referring to mine…seeing a dog appear with a bird, especially a tough recovery, at a great distance…it doesn’t get any better than that. For me. YMMV. Obviously there are dumbasses out there, some of whom have dogs….doesn’t change what gives me my greatest joy…they just don’t get invited back. Very few over the years….thankfully.Not all of them are.
I've been on outings where a poorly trained one ruined the hunt, more than once.