kansaslabman
Member
This was my first non-resident opener in about a decade. And where the heck is all the orange in the fields?
We were stunned at the amount of hunters we saw driving up on Saturday.
We took highway 18 that was south of Mitchell headed towards Platte to try to get on some public hunting with a couple hours to spare before sunset. The first hunter we saw was directly south of Mitchell about 30 miles. This surprised us but figured we would maybe see more hunters. We didn’t see any until we got to our first public hunting spot around Platte. And that was only two hunters for a big public hunting area.
The next public hunting area we went to closing out the last hour or so of the day didn’t have any hunters! We saw about 5 birds at each public hunting spot, but only got two hard shots off at the first spot.
We heard the reports that this was supposed to be the best bird counts in South Dakota in a long time. HMMMM is all I got to say to that.
We hunted private land Sunday and Monday around Chamberlain, Crow Creek, Lyonville and Pukwana and it was pathetic. Great looking habitat too. Tried food plots , sloughs, tree rows, etc. Strips of food plots like Milo near cut corn or cover was best.
The wild bird population has drastically reduced!!!
This was very discouraging!
Saw about 20 birds per day! Not enough for our gang of hunters encouraged by these South Dakota pheasant forecast and reports.
However, what was encouraging is some people telling us that they have gotten into some good quail action around southwest Kansas and prairie chicken numbers in South Dakota in the hundreds!
With all this negative report the scenery is stunning in South Dakota especially Chamberlain and lots of good quality time with friends and got to see our dog sniff up some birds. Our pup was happy!
Oh, by the way, we’ve hunted South Dakota pretty much every year from about 2002 until 2021.
Any feedback on this and why things have changed so much would be appreciated.
I really hope others find some more wild birds than us. We used to see hundreds and in good years around 1000 birds per day.
We were stunned at the amount of hunters we saw driving up on Saturday.
We took highway 18 that was south of Mitchell headed towards Platte to try to get on some public hunting with a couple hours to spare before sunset. The first hunter we saw was directly south of Mitchell about 30 miles. This surprised us but figured we would maybe see more hunters. We didn’t see any until we got to our first public hunting spot around Platte. And that was only two hunters for a big public hunting area.
The next public hunting area we went to closing out the last hour or so of the day didn’t have any hunters! We saw about 5 birds at each public hunting spot, but only got two hard shots off at the first spot.
We heard the reports that this was supposed to be the best bird counts in South Dakota in a long time. HMMMM is all I got to say to that.
We hunted private land Sunday and Monday around Chamberlain, Crow Creek, Lyonville and Pukwana and it was pathetic. Great looking habitat too. Tried food plots , sloughs, tree rows, etc. Strips of food plots like Milo near cut corn or cover was best.
The wild bird population has drastically reduced!!!
This was very discouraging!
Saw about 20 birds per day! Not enough for our gang of hunters encouraged by these South Dakota pheasant forecast and reports.
However, what was encouraging is some people telling us that they have gotten into some good quail action around southwest Kansas and prairie chicken numbers in South Dakota in the hundreds!
With all this negative report the scenery is stunning in South Dakota especially Chamberlain and lots of good quality time with friends and got to see our dog sniff up some birds. Our pup was happy!
Oh, by the way, we’ve hunted South Dakota pretty much every year from about 2002 until 2021.
Any feedback on this and why things have changed so much would be appreciated.
I really hope others find some more wild birds than us. We used to see hundreds and in good years around 1000 birds per day.