Bob Peters
Well-known member
Do you find on average you're mark is too short of where he dropped or too far?
agreed John; marking birds can really be a challenge, especially if you down a bird and shoot at a second. As BB said, I heavily rely on my dogs to locate the bird; that said, if I feel the retrieve might be challenging, I'll mark the spot where I took the shot, with either my hat, if the cover is high & strong enough, or prop up my vest, etc. I also look at the horizon from where I shot, to see if I can align a tree, T-pole, building, etc. There have been past posts on birds that fly a long distance and drop dead. We've had this happen a number of times over the years, and picking a marker to walk to is key. Those retrieves can be particularly challenging, depending on the habitat they fall dead in.I have difficulty in a field of bluestem grass or cattail swale marking a downed bird at 30 to 35 yards.
How do guys who brag about shooting pheasants at 40 to 50 yards, or more, mark their downed birds?
I'm probably not as good at marking birds as I was years ago, before I had a dog. It's just not as critical anymore, most of the time. And if you don't use it, you lose it.Do you find on average you're mark is too short of where he dropped or too far?
We've used the "triangulate" method too, but never with pointed shotguns. The more angle between the two different lines, the better.I’m terrible at marking birds. When we were younger we did a better job. We’d even go so far as pointing our gun at it while directing another into it. If there were three of us the ends would both point at it while the middle guy walked in. Triangulating it
I've always thought that it happens more than we think. I have seen them fall dead with a couple shot in the right place. I've seen them go down with both legs hanging and lost them. But the damdest thing I ever saw was I shot one to close first shot, second was plenty close enough with full choke 12. Both shots went low. It literally crested a rise with both legs dropped and intentions hanging out. Never found it!! I honestly think they are pound for pound the toughest bird to kill. I always try and look at their head when they go down. If they go down with that head up you better have a good dog! I hear guys say they never lose one without a dog. Ok sure. But they are doing the birds a great disservice without one. My dogs have found way too many 1/4 mile away. And quail I didn't even now I hit. Let's see them do that without a dog. Sorry a little off the subject.We've used the "triangulate" method too, but never with pointed shotguns. The more angle between the two different lines, the better.
Several have mentioned, in this tread and the other, those birds that flinch, fly for another 10-15 seconds, and fall stone dead. Sometimes those are easy finds, sometimes not. I lost one of those in SD this year because of unfavorable geography. There was an intervening "high spot" that was just high enough to block the final bit of the birds fall, and also obscured the tree on the horizon was using for line.
Interestingly, I've seen the sail-fall dead thing with quail too, but far less often. Or so I think. I've wondered if it happens more than we realize with quail, but it can be difficult to differentiate from a typical quail flight path.
With the labrador, you watch the tail, or listen.Not sure, I usually have one or two dogs on the bird right away. If I head to the bird, I stay downwind of the bird and turn into the wind maybe 10-20 yards away to have a wider scent cone for the dogs…and I don’t want to introduce more scent into the area. But if I’m heading to a downed bird on my own, I guess I may overshoot the drop spot more often than undershooting the spot…but it’s rare that I’m heading to a downed bird without a dog or two. I spend a lot of time watching the dogs’ demeanor while searching for downed birds…and I listen intently when the dog’s aren’t visible…lots of audible cues as to what’s happening…this assumes I’m within 10-20 yards…when everything goes totally calm and still, the bird usually has been located…then the dog grabs the bird and wrestles it from the cover, like cattails, and that process is pretty distinct sounding…fun to listen to that whole drama. The dogs are the stars!!!
90% of the time one or both of myI have difficulty in a field of bluestem grass or cattail swale marking a downed bird at 30 to 35 yards.
How do guys who brag about shooting pheasants at 40 to 50 yards, or more, mark their downed birds?
That's one reason I gave up the semi auto. I never did knock down 5 quail on the rise but killed three and four multiple times. Very few times I would find them all!I never found marking a downed bird hard at all. But one I shoot a double I can't find my butt.