Goosemaster
Well-known member
NoSo you didn’t pay anybody in New Zealand or Argentina or Mexico, what ever it was
NoSo you didn’t pay anybody in New Zealand or Argentina or Mexico, what ever it was
I don’t think guiding and pay hunting causes a demise in any hunting at all. I do think it gives people the opportunity to hunt and enjoy the outdoors that otherwise might not do it, in the process creating more sportsman and women that purchase licenses, and support local economies. For some they may only hunt with guided services and for some it may just help them get the foot in the door.Hiring guides goes hand in hand with pay hunting. Thus the demise of free range pheasant hunting. Hunting is expensive as it is,let alone paying to get on land,and paying people to take you there.
I agree with this to a point. But I think reality may vary greatly by location. In SD I think pay hunting may provide some of those "foot in the door" type benefits...for non-residents. I think it discourages most residents, having the opposite effect, because the days when pay hunting was rare weren't that long ago. We remember them. Very fondly. In the last 40-50 years, resident license sales have been cut in half, while non-resident sales have increased 3 times.I don’t think guiding and pay hunting causes a demise in any hunting at all. I do think it gives people the opportunity to hunt and enjoy the outdoors that otherwise might not do it, in the process creating more sportsman and women that purchase licenses, and support local economies. For some they may only hunt with guided services and for some it may just help them get the foot in the door.
I agree with a lot of what you are saying to an extent as well, and I can see your concern. SD residents and govt has created the situation tho. It has marketed itself as a pheasant Mecca and has made it to where its own local economies rely on the hunting tourists and the income they bring. It has provided farmers with ways to supplement income and created the need for the land and good land management to try and produce healthy numbers of birds. Unfortunately in the process they have created so much tourism that they needed to supplement bird populations. If hunters come to SD and don’t shoot birds they won’t come back. The avg hunter doesn’t know the difference between a pen bird and a wild bird.I agree with this to a point. But I think reality may vary greatly by location. In SD I think pay hunting may provide some of those "foot in the door" type benefits...for non-residents. I think it discourages most residents, having the opposite effect, because the days when pay hunting was rare weren't that long ago. We remember them. Very fondly. In the last 40-50 years, resident license sales have been cut in half, while non-resident sales have increased 3 times.
Also, depending how frequently "hunts" occur, many/most pay hunt operations are forced to release birds to maintain shootable numbers, whether they're technically a preserve or not. A wild population on a given piece of ground simply couldn't handle such a massive harvest. Consequently, any wild birds around quickly make themselves nearly unshootable, similar to wild birds on public land, leaving ONLY flare nares to shoot, which don't at all provide the same educational experience for hunters as wild birds do. Their learning curve, at least in terms of "how to find & get a shot at a wild pheasant", is pretty much flat. So when they eventually think, "I'm ready to go hunt wild birds on public land," they strike out bigtime, in some cases incorrectly believing wild birds are nearly nonexistent. And back to the preserve they go, completing the circle.
I'm all for a person choosing how to "hunt" & how to use his land. But I believe if pay hunting in SD continues to bloom, it will eventually mean the end of traditional, wild pheasant hunting as we once knew it. To me, that's really sad.
I've only pay hunted twice.Both times in South Dakota, and my dad paid for everything. The first time, we stayed in this farmers house, and hunted his land.He only charged us 250 dollars for 3 nights, and meals that were great.We cleaned our birds,knocked on a few doors, hunted a few walk in areas.That was a fun hunt.Wild birds, because in 1992 nobody had heard of pen raised birds.In 2005 we hunted a fancy farm that charged 450 dollars a day!! Hunted in march.Pen raised easy birds.Maybe there were some wild birds in there. It was near Gregory. They didn't let our dogs in the house.It was owned by some blue blood from Indiana. It was the kind of place that I'm putting a thumbs down on.My dad paid,I didn't spend a dime at that place.After 3 days, he wrote that place a fat check.It was interesting, and the hunting was easy for a guy like me.I don't think there was a limit.I agree with this to a point. But I think reality may vary greatly by location. In SD I think pay hunting may provide some of those "foot in the door" type benefits...for non-residents. I think it discourages most residents, having the opposite effect, because the days when pay hunting was rare weren't that long ago. We remember them. Very fondly. In the last 40-50 years, resident license sales have been cut in half, while non-resident sales have increased 3 times.
Also, depending how frequently "hunts" occur, many/most pay hunt operations are forced to release birds to maintain shootable numbers, whether they're technically a preserve or not. A wild population on a given piece of ground simply couldn't handle such a massive harvest. Consequently, any wild birds around quickly make themselves nearly unshootable, similar to wild birds on public land, leaving ONLY flare nares to shoot, which don't at all provide the same educational experience for hunters as wild birds do. Their learning curve, at least in terms of "how to find & get a shot at a wild pheasant", is pretty much flat. So when they eventually think, "I'm ready to go hunt wild birds on public land," they strike out bigtime, in some cases incorrectly believing wild birds are nearly nonexistent. And back to the preserve they go, completing the circle.
I'm all for a person choosing how to "hunt" & how to use his land. But I believe if pay hunting in SD continues to bloom, it will eventually mean the end of traditional, wild pheasant hunting as we once knew it. To me, that's really sad.
Number 2.Big thumbs down.Not hunting, very easy. Number 1? Ok I get it.I think a big dichotomy you see in this thread are these two sides.
1. A farmer/land owner allowing a few groups a year to stay in an old house or trailer and hunt his ground for a fee. Good for everybody. He keeps a little better habitat around, helps the wild life, and some people from areas devoid of wild birds get a good hunt.
2. An operation that has gotten a little taste of this, and decides to go "whole hog" into the pay hunt business. Suddenly you have entire fields groomed to perfection with milo and corn food plots. There are MOWED paths right through all the fields at evenly spaced intervals. Pen raised birds are released throughout the year, and most often 30 minutes before a large group shows up. Limits upon limits are shot here, day after day. Juicy steaks and old bourbon are consumed on a nightly basis. This I would call a glorified game farm. And not real hunting in my eyes.
That place in Gregory had never seen a pheasant slayer like me before. Lollol reminds of a pay operation I drove by on Sunday. An attractive couple were walking a feed strip when I drove by All decked out and looking good. Looked like they were just getting started. Just up the road from them a rooster is low crawling it back across the road and trying to figure a way to get back into the bird pen
I'm wondering what happens to all these released pheasants???lol reminds of a pay operation I drove by on Sunday. An attractive couple were walking a feed strip when I drove by All decked out and looking good. Looked like they were just getting started. Just up the road from them a rooster is low crawling it back across the road and trying to figure a way to get back into the bird pen
This place has like 5 pens. Gotta be at least 25000 bids doesn’t it? I’m sure that’s small timeI'm wondering what happens to all these released pheasants???
Last Saturday I was picking up some birds in wright county. The bird guy said he could only have 1000 birds per pen because of feed lot regulations. Unfortunately I don't know if this was a state, county or fed regulation.This place has like 5 pens. Gotta be at least 25000 bids doesn’t it? I’m sure that’s small time
Homers think of all the money they could make if the could bill twice on all those missed birds
I do guided charity hunts for Pheasants Forever every fall, like youth hunts and DAV hunts. They always schedule guys in for scratch hunting right after the events get done. There are guys lined up for it almost. So they get like 25 a bird from the charity event and then sell the missed birds at another 14 a bird.Twenty years ago I used to go with a guy by Lincoln Kansas. It was a high dollar put and take place. He had clients that would come in and drop 3-4k and they would release a bunch of pheasants for them. For 50 bucks a day we got use of a house and we would do cleanup hunts on the leftover birds. It was a blast and I would go again tomorrow. Unfortunately the guy I went with decided his whiskey and bar fly’s were more fun