Aerial predators like hawks and eagles do have a buffet it seems with coveysNo, they are a tough little bird. We had back-to-back blizzards here in 78 and 79. 2 feet of snow -50 wind chills for weeks. I found numerous dead birds. including dozens of doves frozen stiff sitting on and in barns. I never saw dead coveys but heard others say they did. I had cabin fever, so spent many hours busting chest high drifts, just to check stuff out. Saw a covey in a dozer pile. They came back strong around 82. They can survive about anything except dozers and track hoes. Most of my life I believed what everyone said about greedy hunters and predators wiping them out. Turned out it was the people telling me that who were the culprits. I actually stopped and talked to a farmer and former quail hunter who was telling me that the damned coyotes killed all his quail.. WHILE HE AND HIS SON WERE SRAYING ROUNDUP IN THIER FENCEROWS!!
Might make them more vulnerable to predators depending on the habit they were pushed in. Singles trying to regroup may whistle and alert predators around. Just depends on the situation.Don't mean to highjack the thread but also had few questions re: quail and along these lines. Pheasant hunt SE SD hard for the last 10 years, pretty much exclusively public. Have moved one covey total over that time period until this year. I've moved 3 separate coveys with between 10-15 birds in each. One of the coveys I've moved numerous times. The first time I was so surprised I didnt even let a shot go despite walking into the group over point. The 2nd and 3rd times i decided to take one each. Since then decided to leave em be when i do run into em with hopes the population grows. Question is, is it hard on em when you move them several different times throughout the year, and is taking a couple from the covey impact the potential growth in population? After tonight our area will have over 22 inches of snow this week and the weekend has projected feel temps of -50, never above 0 for 3 consecutive days, not great, at least the snow with provide some insulation.
I'm glad someone is talking about roundup!No, they are a tough little bird. We had back-to-back blizzards here in 78 and 79. 2 feet of snow -50 wind chills for weeks. I found numerous dead birds. including dozens of doves frozen stiff sitting on and in barns. I never saw dead coveys but heard others say they did. I had cabin fever, so spent many hours busting chest high drifts, just to check stuff out. Saw a covey in a dozer pile. They came back strong around 82. They can survive about anything except dozers and track hoes. Most of my life I believed what everyone said about greedy hunters and predators wiping them out. Turned out it was the people telling me that who were the culprits. I actually stopped and talked to a farmer and former quail hunter who was telling me that the damned coyotes killed all his quail.. WHILE HE AND HIS SON WERE SRAYING ROUNDUP IN THIER FENCEROWS!!
I wouldn’t think moving them every couple weeks would be an issue, something in nature will move them every day…. It’s amazing how they pop up in places like you describe every once in a while then disappear for yearsDon't mean to highjack the thread but also had few questions re: quail and along these lines. Pheasant hunt SE SD hard for the last 10 years, pretty much exclusively public. Have moved one covey total over that time period until this year. I've moved 3 separate coveys with between 10-15 birds in each. One of the coveys I've moved numerous times. The first time I was so surprised I didnt even let a shot go despite walking into the group over point. The 2nd and 3rd times i decided to take one each. Since then decided to leave em be when i do run into em with hopes the population grows. Question is, is it hard on em when you move them several different times throughout the year, and is taking a couple from the covey impact the potential growth in population? After tonight our area will have over 22 inches of snow this week and the weekend has projected feel temps of -50, never above 0 for 3 consecutive days, not great, at least the snow with provide some insulation.