Yeah over 25 are rare.This is my 40th season chasing roosters: SD public land, with a 6-year hiatus to central IA.
Tails 23"-24": A couple handfuls.
Tails 24"-25": 3.
Tails over 25": 0.
Yes, genetics obviously come into play, but so does age.
For a rooster to see a 3rd hunting season is pretty rare.
I'd think that 28" tail came from a bird in his 2nd season. Possibly 3rd. He just had uncommonly good tail genes.
You will never get a 27.I have gotten 2 over 26.5.That is impressive for a wild bird! I shoot alot of pheasants in Iowa and anything over 25 is pretty uncommon. I have 2 at the taxidermist from last season, but without pulling them, no telling how long they are, but they aren't in the 27" league! I would also like to see the feet!
Not realThis bird had the longest tail I've shot by several inches. Both feathers were the same length I shot him November 22, 2023.
Another guy at my house got his twin a week earlier.
Over 27 inches is very very rare.I have one,in 54 years of hunting.2 over 26.Many over 24.A few over 25.Yeah over 25 are rare.
But plenty of bragging rights, just the same.No skill involved.
Now there are hybrids at game farms, Reese X is one and tails typically in the high 30’s.
Oh boy… Never fails that once a year we have to pull back the curtain and talk about the SD stocking programs and where A5 and golden hour really get their birds…This is why some of these south dakota guys always claim to have bagged roosters with extra-long trails. They just follow around the SD gf&p truck that drives around randomly releasing birds on public land. Kristi ain't no dummy, she orders birds with the longest tails possible. Now drive to Kansas and shoot a blue back with a tail that touches 30, you sell your gun, retire your dog, and buy a lottery 🎟 ticket, because you've reached the mountain top and it ain't ever gonna get any better.
Oh boy… Never fails that once a year we have to pull back the curtain and talk about the SD stocking programs and where A5 and golden hour really get their birds…