A5 Sweet 16
Well-known member
One goal of my & Ace's YouTube channel is to educate people about wild pheasants, sometimes correcting misconceptions. I did a little preaching in the video I attached here, but not about this.
Wild hens will have AT MOST one hatch a year, meaning they'll have at most one brood of chicks a year. The only time a hen will renest, producing another clutch of eggs, is if her nest is destroyed, or for whatever reason none hatch. But as soon as one egg hatches, her urge to renest disappears. Even if no chicks survive she won't renest.
So when we hear about a 2nd or 3rd hatch....nope. Didn't happen. Birds that are very young during fall may result from a subsequent nest of eggs, but not a subsequent hatch. Also, eggs are more hearty than new chicks. I believe conditions during & right AFTER a peak hatch period are even more critical than conditions during peak nesting.
In this video, Ace & I got our limit early & then walked a couple hours for fun.
Wild hens will have AT MOST one hatch a year, meaning they'll have at most one brood of chicks a year. The only time a hen will renest, producing another clutch of eggs, is if her nest is destroyed, or for whatever reason none hatch. But as soon as one egg hatches, her urge to renest disappears. Even if no chicks survive she won't renest.
So when we hear about a 2nd or 3rd hatch....nope. Didn't happen. Birds that are very young during fall may result from a subsequent nest of eggs, but not a subsequent hatch. Also, eggs are more hearty than new chicks. I believe conditions during & right AFTER a peak hatch period are even more critical than conditions during peak nesting.
In this video, Ace & I got our limit early & then walked a couple hours for fun.