GW from Tenn
Member
I've hunted several parts of the state of North Dakota and South Dakota and from what I've seen North Dakota has the potential to be as good of a pheasant hunting state as South Dakota, they just don't have the habitat on private ground that they're southern friends have. Why is that? Outside of the crops being in the field late in North Dakota the birds do not have any cover on private ground during the fall and winter. They have fence rolls and wind breaks and that's about it. I've even seen where farmers use the road side cover to cut for hay. South Dakota on the other hand has eminence cover everywhere it seems and abundant wildlife. I'm sure something legal that I don't understand probably comes into play in this. Just been wondering though over the years. When we hunted Kansas several years ago it seemed all the birds were on private ground when we were hunting public, of course most of the crops were still in field also.