nstric
New member
Hello all –
My buddy and I had a heck of a time patterning the pheasants today, and I’m hoping you all can help me figure out what I may be overlooking, forgetting, etc.?
About me: Live in Iowa, hunt pheasants 2-3 times per week during season behind my now 2 year old vizsla, “Gunner”. Some of this seasons outings are captured here. Despite Iowa’s lower bird counts, we’ve had mostly success throughout the season until today.
About today’s hunt
Weather: Big drop in temperature compared to yesterday. A high of 61 degrees (very unusual) with melting snow yesterday, and we hit about 32 degrees today (more normal), nearly all snow gone. At 8:30 am, when we started in on our first draw, it was 22 degrees, with a 15-20 mph NW wind. Very light drizzle, sometimes freezing, sometimes sleet. The wind picked up as the front moved through, topping out near 25 mph, and really swirled once the majority of the front passed. At different times this morning, the wind was out of the NW, the W, the E, and the S. Very odd. Mid to late morning brought a decrease in wind, increase in temperature (approaching 32 degrees), and periods of light drizzle that would freeze on contact with the gun, etc. Always 100% overcast. No sun.
Terrain: Hunted ½ mile long buffer strips first, then a ¾ mile long woody draw, then 320 acres of big block CRP (mostly blue stem). Saw 0 birds, 0 birds, and 1 rooster respectively. This is of significance in that I know hundreds of birds are in the area. Just one week prior I saw over 50 birds in the very woody draw I hunted this morning (sunny that day). And the owner of the buffer strips said loads of pheasants were in the buffers just two days prior. I’d not hunted the 320 of big block before, but will share it looked very good -- variation in grass length, some cattails, some woody cover, elevation change (no flooding, wind protection, etc.), water, and both corn and soybean fields surrounding.
My Plan: I had welcomed the warmer temps the past few days as I figured the snow melt would once again open up the CRP grasses for habitat. I would have thought the birds to have gorged themselves yesterday, taking advantage of the now snow free ground. They should have basked in the sun, ate twice, and taken roost in the now available CRP. Today’s huge drop in temps, with the rain and wind, I’d have thought, should have kept them on roost throughout the morning. They should have held tight, and we should have reaped the rewards of good dog work. That didn’t happen.
On to my question
Given all of that above, the birds weren’t in buffer strips. They weren’t in woody draws. They weren’t in big block CRP. They weren’t in road ditches, under evergreens, etc. And this, again, is in an area where I know there are hundreds of pheasants.
So …. In conditions like today, where do the pheasants go and why? There’s got to be logic I’m overlooking; a pattern the birds put in play. I don’t buy today’s experience as happenstance. What say you? Can you help me solve this puzzle?
Thanks!
My buddy and I had a heck of a time patterning the pheasants today, and I’m hoping you all can help me figure out what I may be overlooking, forgetting, etc.?
About me: Live in Iowa, hunt pheasants 2-3 times per week during season behind my now 2 year old vizsla, “Gunner”. Some of this seasons outings are captured here. Despite Iowa’s lower bird counts, we’ve had mostly success throughout the season until today.
About today’s hunt
Weather: Big drop in temperature compared to yesterday. A high of 61 degrees (very unusual) with melting snow yesterday, and we hit about 32 degrees today (more normal), nearly all snow gone. At 8:30 am, when we started in on our first draw, it was 22 degrees, with a 15-20 mph NW wind. Very light drizzle, sometimes freezing, sometimes sleet. The wind picked up as the front moved through, topping out near 25 mph, and really swirled once the majority of the front passed. At different times this morning, the wind was out of the NW, the W, the E, and the S. Very odd. Mid to late morning brought a decrease in wind, increase in temperature (approaching 32 degrees), and periods of light drizzle that would freeze on contact with the gun, etc. Always 100% overcast. No sun.
Terrain: Hunted ½ mile long buffer strips first, then a ¾ mile long woody draw, then 320 acres of big block CRP (mostly blue stem). Saw 0 birds, 0 birds, and 1 rooster respectively. This is of significance in that I know hundreds of birds are in the area. Just one week prior I saw over 50 birds in the very woody draw I hunted this morning (sunny that day). And the owner of the buffer strips said loads of pheasants were in the buffers just two days prior. I’d not hunted the 320 of big block before, but will share it looked very good -- variation in grass length, some cattails, some woody cover, elevation change (no flooding, wind protection, etc.), water, and both corn and soybean fields surrounding.
My Plan: I had welcomed the warmer temps the past few days as I figured the snow melt would once again open up the CRP grasses for habitat. I would have thought the birds to have gorged themselves yesterday, taking advantage of the now snow free ground. They should have basked in the sun, ate twice, and taken roost in the now available CRP. Today’s huge drop in temps, with the rain and wind, I’d have thought, should have kept them on roost throughout the morning. They should have held tight, and we should have reaped the rewards of good dog work. That didn’t happen.
On to my question
Given all of that above, the birds weren’t in buffer strips. They weren’t in woody draws. They weren’t in big block CRP. They weren’t in road ditches, under evergreens, etc. And this, again, is in an area where I know there are hundreds of pheasants.
So …. In conditions like today, where do the pheasants go and why? There’s got to be logic I’m overlooking; a pattern the birds put in play. I don’t buy today’s experience as happenstance. What say you? Can you help me solve this puzzle?
Thanks!