5 guys and 2 seasoned dogs hunted northwest(ish) Kansas hard on Saturday/Sunday. 4 roosters and a handful of quail. Mostly private and a couple of WIHAs. Spoke with a few other groups. Just as bad and usually much worse than our experience. It's truly abysmal out there - just as bad as they said it would be in the report. The drought has done quite a number. Of course, farming is the bigger impact. If anyone in the world cared about farm country or the wildlife out in it, the right phrase for me would be "ecological disaster." One can drive miles and miles and miles and not see ANY cover for ANY wildlife. Every field farmed into the roads, every corner farmed and stripped (hail mary to save the birds? condition the use of public water for pivots on planting 3 of 4 to permanent wildlife cover, but I digress), wheat cut at 4 inches, milo and corn pastured or baled. The very few remaining decent CRP blocks (and there is miles and miles to the next one) or unfarmed draws are in WIHA, which means the few places for the animals to live and survive becomes unlivable and further pushes them into other cover, of which there is none. Mortality will be high because there is nowhere else for the birds to go. At this point, I am a little worried the quail on WIHA will be hunted out by bored pheasant hunters. A covey can only sustain so much pressure. Put simply, the birds (and all wildlife) are in real trouble in Kansas, in my humble opinion. Yet, we saw a lot of people hunting. I feel equally privileged and burdened by being alive and witnessing the near decimation of quail in eastern Kansas, and now the near eradication of pheasants in western Kansas. It's pretty depressing. My advice: Go somewhere else.
How about a bit of good news? The few acres that have cover look as good as I can recall: thick and tall and good and ready for a running pheasant or to protect all wildlife from a tough winter. Some of it is really difficult to hunt. Also, I had a couple conversations at the bar with some farmers and they are clearly growing puzzled as to why the birds are disappearing. Asking the question is a great first step.
Good luck out there!
How about a bit of good news? The few acres that have cover look as good as I can recall: thick and tall and good and ready for a running pheasant or to protect all wildlife from a tough winter. Some of it is really difficult to hunt. Also, I had a couple conversations at the bar with some farmers and they are clearly growing puzzled as to why the birds are disappearing. Asking the question is a great first step.
Good luck out there!