MN report

Certainly a ton of hens in some of these areas. If we have a dry/warm spring, we could have a bumper crop next year.

June is the critical time period. Unfortunately June was like a monsoon last year here in many parts of the state.

I posted this earlier during deer season, but the wildlife where I hunt exploded to levels I've not seen in nearly 25 years and I'm fully convinced it was due to the fake winter we had last year. Deer, wild turkeys, and pheasants are all present in record numbers in central MN right now.
 
June is the critical time period. Unfortunately June was like a monsoon last year here in many parts of the state.

I posted this earlier during deer season, but the wildlife where I hunt exploded to levels I've not seen in nearly 25 years and I'm fully convinced it was due to the fake winter we had last year. Deer, wild turkeys, and pheasants are all present in record numbers in central MN right now.
Don't worry. Ideal goldilocks conditions are best. I know this might surprise you, the pheasants in the monsoon region did not go extinct. In fact there's still quite a few around. Crazy I know!
 
I took one of my Father's friends with today. He's been asking me to come with for a while now. It was a tremendous hunt. Only took us about 2 hours at 2.5 spots. The second spot was loaded. It held 26 pheasants and I folded up 4 roosters there.
 

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December 18th, public land hunt, SC MN.

We had a nice drive down to pheasant country.

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Arriving at about 9:45, with the wind out of the NW, we headed along the trees on the cut corn edge of a WMA that we've hit a couple times in recent weeks. There was less than an inch fresh dusting on the ground. We immediately found that hens were hanging out under folded over wetland grasses 50 yards from the field edge, and not super wild like they had been the previous week.

We made our way across the beaver dam on the creek that splits the property, noticing that there was more water showing downstream and even right at the dam on the upstream side than the previous week. The warm weather last weekend had allowed the creek to disappear much of the ice. Onward we pressed, to the east/west running slough without much more action. The plan was to circle counter clockwise, down around to the east end, and work up along the bean and corn fields on the south edge.

Down at the NE corner of the slough is a thicket. Honey ended up 140 yards back, assuming chasing a runner, and went on point. Before I made up my decision what to do, the rooster flushed wild and came sailing up along the slough, out of range.

When we got over closer to the SE side of the slough, maybe 120 yards from the edge of the bean field, Honey started tracking cross wind, south west to north east. The rooster didn't wait for her to lock onto him and flushed, crossing left to right. I managed a well placed shot, and he dropped, without so much as a twitch. He was a spring of the year bird.

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We continued on our counter clockwise progression. Honey was heading up closer to the field edge, with me about 80 yards from the edge, in the cattails. A rooster flushed wild several steps ahead, to my right, mostly heading away. There was a one inch diameter woody plant between us, and a few branches, but not so much I couldn't shoot. I placed my shot right on him, mistakenly, as he veered slightly to the left. I missing him. The second shot to his left connected hard, and he went down, tail sticking up. Two last flaps on the ground were over before Honey, who I don't think saw much of the action, came downwind and went to him. He was a 2nd year bird.

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We progressed up the south side of the slough, along the bean field, about 60 yards out in the cattails. As we approached a small thicket between the slough and the field edge, I anticipated action. Nothing. However, as we got parallel to the end of the thicket, a hen and rooster got up wild 30 yards or so ahead, crossing left to right. I tried some shots at 40-50 yards and didn't connect.

As I was trying to see where he would go, a hen and rooster flushed behind us, about 40 yards. I turned around for the right to left cross, and attempted a 50 and 60 yard shot without any luck.

We finished circling much of the slough without another rooster, but did have 4 consecutive steps that broke through the slushy, spring fed slough, that had softened since the previous hunt due to the warm preceding weekend.

We hunted around some thickets on high ground with some tracking, but no birds produced. As we headed back to the vehicle, along another thicket, I started veering toward a row of shorter evergreens. Honey was maybe 60 or so yards up ahead and to my left, on the edge of the thicket, working cross wind a bit. A rooster flushed wild, quartering back to my left. If I had been 20 yards closer, I would have attempted a shot, but just let him sail back to the slough.

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With 2 birds in the bag, we headed over to a round slough Wma I had also hunted a couple times in the last month. While still sitting in the vehicle, a rooster got up out of the horsetail between the parking spot and the thicket ahead. He flew about 20 yards and set down again, about 50 yards from where we were parked. We quietly got ready and headed toward him. There are deer trails through the snake grass, and he had landed on one of those. Honey tracked him for a while through the thicket, before giving up.

We exited the thicket on the far side, and headed to the side of the slough to work the cattail edge counter clockwise. We had gone 400 yards or so, when Honey got birdy on a little deer trail cutting into the tails, pointing left. I coaxed her in. She was expecting a flush, but nothing happened. She circled back to the trail and moved down a yard or two, repeating the same process. As she crossed right to left in front of me, I saw movement in the stalks from a bird, and thought it had moved to behind her, when it then popped out ahead of her to the left, low and away. One shot dropped him. Honey got to him before the flaps stopped, but he wasn't going anywhere again regardless.

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Recap: 4 shots at 3 flushed birds (one wild flush near me, but not the dog), 3 birds in the bag. There were the two that flushed wild at a distance too, and I took some 40-60 yard shots at, but didn't connect.

Dusting of snow seemed to help them hold better. But the spring fed slough I hunted had soggy ice after that warm weekend. It wasn't like that the previous Friday. I was thankful it was only 10 inches or so deep where I broke through completely for a few steps.

All in all, a nice outing and a December MN limit in the bag.

@Bob Peters - I had to try out the Beef Commercial, at Bumps, on the way home. Good stuff. Thanks for mentioning it.



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December 19th, public land hunt, SW MN.

1 rooster in the bag. Knocked down just before sunset, at quite a distance, on my 3rd shot. I assumed he was winged by the way he went down. When I got up there, Honey wanted to keep going. She finally caught up to him, 70 yards or so from where he went down, and over 130 yards from where I shot. He did a flip and disappeared before our eyes, leaving Honey with a mouth full of feathers. We searched for over 10 minutes. I stepped down all the snow around there. Nothing. Finally, she came back and caught his scent a mere 3-4 feet from where he was last seen and marked by the feathers Honey knocked off him. I had stepped down on the spot where he was hiding. He must have been right on the ground and tried to wait us out. Another rodeo ensued, but she hog tied him this time.

Normally, when I take a bird from her, that's it. Not this time. They kept fighting, tooth and claw. Quite the scrapper of a bird.

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His tail measured 24". That's the longest since I started measuring them.

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The first rooster of the day, hit on the 2nd shot, through thicket branches, went down on the other side of the thicket. I finally found my way through to find Honey on point at a clump at the base of some thicket plants. I coaxed Honey and she went around counter clockwise to about the 11 position. Rooster popped out at 3. I could see it, but not her. I called her over, and she tracked down along the thicket. Another bird flushed. It is possible it was the same one.

Had one I tickled at the first spot and another, right before the bagged bird, that I missed.

12 hens, 3 roosters seen at first spot. 6 hens and 3 roosters at the 2nd spot in the last 1.5 hours of the dsy. 3 roosters flushed relatively close by and 3 were further flushes.

It took an hour longer than usual to drive through the cities in the snowstorm in the morning. Didn't start hunting until 10:30 or so, I think. It snowed off and on during the hunt. Sometimes wet and causing issues with my glasses. 3-4 inches on the ground when we arrived and a little more when we left. 23-25 deg, 10-15 mph wind out of the NW, and then N. Fresh snow made for wet pants.

First WPA:

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We had a mixture of jumpy birds and birds that held until we were closer. Birds were around thickets at the first spot, and thicket and snow clogged wetland grasses at the 2nd spot.
 
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I have done all my MN pheasant hunting in SE Minnesota this season. It has not been great but it has not been bad either.

Last night and today we got our first plowable snow. My neighbor and I got out this afternoon for about 1.5 hours.

My dog pointed/flushed a total of 12 pheasants. She is a pointing lab. All at close range. Most birds really held tight today. Three were roosters. I missed an easy layup shot and later shot one.

This past weekend, on the same property it was impossible to get within 80 yards of a hen. Today they were burrowed in the snow and grass and my dog had several solid points.
 
I have done all my MN pheasant hunting in SE Minnesota this season. It has not been great but it has not been bad either.

Last night and today we got our first plowable snow. My neighbor and I got out this afternoon for about 1.5 hours.

My dog pointed/flushed a total of 12 pheasants. She is a pointing lab. All at close range. Most birds really held tight today. Three were roosters. I missed an easy layup shot and later shot one.

This past weekend, on the same property it was impossible to get within 80 yards of a hen. Today they were burrowed in the snow and grass and my dog had several solid points.
Yeah, I hunted at least one place in common between last Friday and this Wed, and it was much different. And that was just with a dusting of snow. How much snow do you have down there? There was 3-4 inches where I hunted today, and it was a mix of distant and closer flushes.
 
Yeah, I hunted at least one place in common between last Friday and this Wed, and it was much different. And that was just with a dusting of snow. How much snow do you have down there? There was 3-4 inches where I hunted today, and it was a mix of distant and closer flushes.

We had 4-5" of light powdery snow. I did see three pheasants flush at long distance but 12 held tight. Most of the upland cover always covered with snow and blown down. The birds were mostly in the edges of brushy cover.
 
I love December hunts, especially when majority of people are thinking ice fishing! I hunted solo on Wednesday Dec 18 and it was a fun day! I’ve never shot my December limit but was close, should have had it but regardless fun day out in the field with the pup.
 

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December 20, public land hunt, SW/SC MN.

Cold day. 1 degree when we started hunting, about 9:30 or so. -13 windchill, and worse on the downwind side of the interior of a large slough, with the wind picking up speed across the flat ice. It only got up to 6 above by end of the day.

Long story short, we only saw 6 hens and 2 roosters at the first spot and 4 hens at the second spot. These are areas where we have seen dozens of hens/unknowns and 8 or so roosters before.

The 1st rooster flew out of the middle of the cattails and fluttered down 80 yards from us, to get to the cut corn field, up a slope from the wetland. We hustled up there and never found him, just some tracks. The 2nd one flushed wild as honey was stalking through the cattails, maybe 20 yards from the edge, and 40+ yards up. He was a cackler. I took one shot through the tops of the cattails, but didn't touch him.

There weren't nearly enough tracks going to and from the slough. I think a combination of them flying out and back in, for a bite to eat, so they wouldn't get full of fresh snow and so they could minimize non-snuggled in time, along with a possibility of not coming out at all.

At the 2nd place, I found spots in the snow where they had flown out of the slough and landed near the shelter belt, which is between the slough and the cut corn on the other side.

Edges should be nicer Saturday afternoon and Sunday, for those who are hunting, with warmer weather (15+).

Maybe the sundogs had them running for cover.

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Thanks, I plan to hunt on Monday. How deep was the snow by you?
3-4 inches, except where drifted on the downwind, interior side of a slough, where it was 8" and crusty.

I think they were only deep in the cattails because of the extra cold (1 degree to start, and maybe 6 deg by end of day). And the reason I say they were going in and out to eat is because I witnessed it. Also less walking and more flying to and from the cattails. Wind was darn cold at times. If it had been above 15 deg, I think they would have been hanging out on the edges.

I won't be out again until after Christmas.
 
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Hunted WC yesterday afternoon to sunset. Completely calm. First private area, small slough with canary grass, put up 6 hens holding tight. No roosters.

Hunted public the rest of the afternoon. Really nice areas - alder thickets, cattails, knocked down trees and brushy areas. Cut corn adjacent. Nada. And no tracks.

Wrapped it up at 4:30, decided to drive gravel roads and scout until dark. Often see pretty sizable groups out in the middle of cut corn fields getting a meal before bed. Pretty easy to spot against fresh snow.

Did not see any birds. First time that’s happened in years.

Birds must be really deep in the cattails/trees.
 
Hunted WC yesterday afternoon to sunset. Completely calm. First private area, small slough with canary grass, put up 6 hens holding tight. No roosters.

Hunted public the rest of the afternoon. Really nice areas - alder thickets, cattails, knocked down trees and brushy areas. Cut corn adjacent. Nada. And no tracks.

Wrapped it up at 4:30, decided to drive gravel roads and scout until dark. Often see pretty sizable groups out in the middle of cut corn fields getting a meal before bed. Pretty easy to spot against fresh snow.

Did not see any birds. First time that’s happened in years.

Birds must be really deep in the cattails/trees.
Yep. They were trying to stay warm, and not waning to trudge through the fresh snow much either. Darn them! :)
 
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