Season Assessment

I'd think sub 400K would be the norm with the lack of habitat. The landscape doesn't resemble what it did in mid 2000s up there anymore. Pretty barren except for a field here and there and some corners and ditches. Unless that has changed in the last couple of years. Don't think I've hunted up there since about 2022.
You're right, a total lack of habitat. That's why we see birds really concentrated in areas with habitat. I have never seen farmers and ranchers bale as much hay as they do now. And a lot of it goes to Texas. Those out of state swathers monitor that drought monitor and come a calling when emergency hazing and grazing opens up.
 
Last year one of the fields next to the farmhouse was wheat that was cut with a stripper head, the tall stubble was loaded with birds all winter. It was hard to hunt since the birds could just sprint down the rows but provided excellent cover compared to low cut wheat or harvested corn/Milo fields.

It was a corn field this year but there are even more pheasants around which I attribute to the great cover last winter.
 
Just came back from a 3 day trip starting 12/27. 65 degrees on Saturday made things tough, but still saw a bunch of birds. Sunday brought 25 MPH sustained, 40 MPH gusts, 15 degrees and horizontal snow and ice. That was a game changer. Hunted some really good ground and saw bunches of Pheasants and Quail. Tough to get on them, but despite the weather we were able to put quite a few in the bag. Monday was a great day, started out at about 16 degrees warming up to low 30’s with just a little wind in comparison to the day before. Birds cooperated very well that day and 2 of us bagged 7 roosters and 8 quail. Lots of birds, both pheasant and quail. Still lots of pheasants flushing super wild. Great trip. Undoubtedly in the area that I hunt there were more pheasants than I’ve seen in 5 years by a long shot. I thought after my opening weekend trip that the quail were only ok. I’m retracting that statement and saying the quail were REALLY good. We pushed 8 coveys on one of the days and several on the other days. Keeping my fingers crossed for another good spring!
 
Just came back from a 3 day trip starting 12/27. 65 degrees on Saturday made things tough, but still saw a bunch of birds. Sunday brought 25 MPH sustained, 40 MPH gusts, 15 degrees and horizontal snow and ice. That was a game changer. Hunted some really good ground and saw bunches of Pheasants and Quail. Tough to get on them, but despite the weather we were able to put quite a few in the bag. Monday was a great day, started out at about 16 degrees warming up to low 30’s with just a little wind in comparison to the day before. Birds cooperated very well that day and 2 of us bagged 7 roosters and 8 quail. Lots of birds, both pheasant and quail. Still lots of pheasants flushing super wild. Great trip. Undoubtedly in the area that I hunt there were more pheasants than I’ve seen in 5 years by a long shot. I thought after my opening weekend trip that the quail were only ok. I’m retracting that statement and saying the quail were REALLY good. We pushed 8 coveys on one of the days and several on the other days. Keeping my fingers crossed for another good spring!
Sounds like a great trip! I went out on Saturday but was done by noon because of the weather and the running birds, we really need some snow to break up the running lanes! I figured Sunday was a bust due to wind and had to go back to work on Monday when I really wanted to be out.
 
Sounds like a great trip! I went out on Saturday but was done by noon because of the weather and the running birds, we really need some snow to break up the running lanes! I figured Sunday was a bust due to wind and had to go back to work on Monday when I really wanted to be out.
Yea, Saturday was tough to corral them…too warm. I thought Sunday was going to be a bust too, but they were in the heavy CRP and Phragmites if your dog could get them to flush. Monday was the best. Cold, but at least it wasn’t a wind tunnel and the birds were still in heavy cover.
 
Just came back from a 3 day trip starting 12/27. 65 degrees on Saturday made things tough, but still saw a bunch of birds. Sunday brought 25 MPH sustained, 40 MPH gusts, 15 degrees and horizontal snow and ice. That was a game changer. Hunted some really good ground and saw bunches of Pheasants and Quail. Tough to get on them, but despite the weather we were able to put quite a few in the bag. Monday was a great day, started out at about 16 degrees warming up to low 30’s with just a little wind in comparison to the day before. Birds cooperated very well that day and 2 of us bagged 7 roosters and 8 quail. Lots of birds, both pheasant and quail. Still lots of pheasants flushing super wild. Great trip. Undoubtedly in the area that I hunt there were more pheasants than I’ve seen in 5 years by a long shot. I thought after my opening weekend trip that the quail were only ok. I’m retracting that statement and saying the quail were REALLY good. We pushed 8 coveys on one of the days and several on the other days. Keeping my fingers crossed for another good spring!
I have shot 10 birds in the last 4 outings since the 20th of December. I will be hunting again tomorrow. Not seeing too many, or what I would call many. 3 or 4 covey's each trip but I am not looking for them. That is a long way from 15-20 covey's when hunting was good. I had a landowner deny me permission to hunt Tuesday on an outstanding piece of CRP. I saw a dozen birds flying in there so I asked for permission. His exact words were " I am not going to allow permission until our birds numbers come back". Which is exactly what I am seeing living here and being out here every day. While it may be more pheasants than you have seen in the last 5 years, which it is for me as well, our numbers remain down, and a way down from good years. A good year would be 750,000 birds harvested and we will be below half that.
 
In NC Kansas first ever quail hunt. Covered A LOT of different ground today, 1 covey, 12-14 birds, wild flushed on the last walk of the day. Ran out of shooting light to go after them. Had some nice dog work on 6 different roosters, the shooter is awful. Missed 2.
 
I have shot 10 birds in the last 4 outings since the 20th of December. I will be hunting again tomorrow. Not seeing too many, or what I would call many. 3 or 4 covey's each trip but I am not looking for them. That is a long way from 15-20 covey's when hunting was good. I had a landowner deny me permission to hunt Tuesday on an outstanding piece of CRP. I saw a dozen birds flying in there so I asked for permission. His exact words were " I am not going to allow permission until our birds numbers come back". Which is exactly what I am seeing living here and being out here every day. While it may be more pheasants than you have seen in the last 5 years, which it is for me as well, our numbers remain down, and a way down from good years. A good year would be 750,000 birds harvested and we will be below half that.
I used to hunt a bit in Rush County about 20 years ago. Bird numbers were amazing. The farmer we used to hunt on has turned a lot of his CRP to crop and somehow, the pheasants have gone away. Very sad
 
Hunted further west in Rooks County, moved 1 covey of 8 birds, female wirehair locked them down beautifully, I shot 1 male. We did go after 2 singles and both were hens, so I left them alone. Another day of some great rooster work by both the shorthair and wirehair. Again, the shooter could not deliver.

That is a wrap on my Kansas quail hunt, that really turned into more of a pheasant hunt, but it was a ton of fun. Dogs had some good work on quite a few hen pheasants, so that should bode well for next year. Sorry I couldn’t thin out some of the roosters though. All in all Kansas did not disappoint, some beautiful country!
 
2 roosters and 2 quail yesterday. 12 roosters in the last 14 days which was 5 hunting trips. Saw another 640 acres of CRP that got fenced with cattle. Every time I feel more optimistic, I get deflated with habitat loss. While hunting yesterday, on the radio they kept talking about the cattle shortage, well doesn't seem like it here. A rancher here did have big round bales of CRP hay advertised for $50 and has over 2000 of them so there is a cattle shortage but not a hay shortage. Seems like there are bales in fields everywhere. The worst enemy our birds in Kansas have are emergency haying and grazing.
 
Couldn’t agree more. Always very perplexing to see all the round bales piled up, not being used and rotting in place.
 
Couldn’t agree more. Always very perplexing to see all the round bales piled up, not being used and rotting in place.
Me and my friend are always pointing out the rotting bails around all the mowed areas and thinking how big of a difference not wasting that grass would make
 
2 roosters and 2 quail yesterday. 12 roosters in the last 14 days which was 5 hunting trips. Saw another 640 acres of CRP that got fenced with cattle. Every time I feel more optimistic, I get deflated with habitat loss. While hunting yesterday, on the radio they kept talking about the cattle shortage, well doesn't seem like it here. A rancher here did have big round bales of CRP hay advertised for $50 and has over 2000 of them so there is a cattle shortage but not a hay shortage. Seems like there are bales in fields everywhere. The worst enemy our birds in Kansas have are emergency haying and grazing.
Some of the excess CRP hay bales may be required as part of the program. Much of the CRP was in a 10-year contract, and this time is up. Some of this is getting converted back into farm land but a lot of it is being re-enrolled. Either of these scenarios the grass either has to be swathed and baled to enter the next phase to plant forbs. A light discing is another practice if being re-enrolled. These must occur before spring nestings occur. I think the bales of hay are a good sign in some cases. It could mean the land is being re-enrolled for another 10 years.
 
Some of the excess CRP hay bales may be required as part of the program. Much of the CRP was in a 10-year contract, and this time is up. Some of this is getting converted back into farm land but a lot of it is being re-enrolled. Either of these scenarios the grass either has to be swathed and baled to enter the next phase to plant forbs. A light discing is another practice if being re-enrolled. These must occur before spring nestings occur. I think the bales of hay are a good sign in some cases. It could mean the land is being re-enrolled for another 10 years.
Could be but when they fence it off and put cattle on it, that probably isn't. But the bottom line is, many farmers, ranchers, and landowners are begging to cut CRP every summer. And much of the CRP swathing is done by out staters that come knocking when we start inching towards D2 each summer. But we are also talking about swathing every inch of grass everywhere. Not just CRP. It would be nice to see PF working the USDA and the state of Kansas to come up with a program to leave tall wheat stubble in, a corners program, or a program that leaves small strips of grass similar to pollinator strips. Mowing of public utilities needs to be banned during the nesting and brood raising period. But wheat stubble is the key. Long before CRP, wheat stubble that was knee high was the best habitat in Kansas. And it really got good when the weeds grew after harvest. Back then farmers didn't spray all summer long. They even spray the ditches now. And the county has been pushing out of the plum thickets that were in the ditches.
 
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