Wierdest place you've seen a pheasant.

There is a healthy "sub urban" population on the east outskirts of Fresno, Ca(600,000 pop.). It is a area of 2-10 acre lots with houses on everyone. No real ag nearby except orange orchards. Lots of good cover though between the canals, sloughs, ponds, and pastures. Just goes to show that pheasants don't need grain crops to survive. As a matter of fact except for northern Ca none of our huntable pops have much access to grain.
 
Seen 5,000 pheasants in a guys basement once. Okay........they were just chicks but nevertheless they were pheasants:D

P.S. -- I've read a few posts were pheasants were seen in trees. Most of us don't no this but trees are their natural roosting place and are even a place to lounge in during the day. Here in the U.S. our birds roost on the ground. They do this because ground dwelling preditors are the lesser of the two evils in the pheasnat world. Raptors keep them out and away from roosting in trees:)

--1pheas4
 
Tmike

Last Dec we were hunting a slough near Aberdeen and as we came out, the dog stuck its head down into the snow and pulled a rooster out of a badger hole under 6" of snow!
 
Last Dec we were hunting a slough near Aberdeen and as we came out, the dog stuck its head down into the snow and pulled a rooster out of a badger hole under 6" of snow!

LOL.....good thing that's all he pulled out of there:D I've seen pheasants run into rabbit and ground hog holes before too. Usally can't get to them once their in there:( --1pheas4
 
I have a picture of no less than 10 pheasants (mostly roosters) sitting in a tree by the side of the road. There was a covey of quail in the tree next to it. This was the night before opener 2 years ago. The pic quality isn't great, but you can tell they're pheasants and you can see the quail. These were all wild birds. I'll see if I can scrounge up the pic for you guys and post it (I know I haven't put it in photobucket yet).

when i was only 7 or 8 we hunting in republic county ks and there were over a hundred wild pheasants sitting in the the trees behind my grandma's house, got it on film not sure where it is anymore tho.
 
While duck hunting, I had a rooster land in my decoys in the water!!! Yes, granted , I heard some shots behind me quite aways back and then he flew in wounded I am sure. He started to swim around and I got up and tredged out there and retrieved him!! Looked like he was trying to pedal a bicycle out there in the water!!!! But was neat to see and did not waste a shell like normal!!!!LOL:cheers:
 
While duck hunting, I had a rooster land in my decoys in the water!!! Yes, granted , I heard some shots behind me quite aways back and then he flew in wounded I am sure. He started to swim around and I got up and tredged out there and retrieved him!! Looked like he was trying to pedal a bicycle out there in the water!!!! But was neat to see and did not waste a shell like normal!!!!LOL:cheers:


Blewbijou, I have to ask you this because I lost a few roosters that were shot over water this year. I've never seen a pheasant swim before but it was obvious those birds I lost had to swim. They just disapeared.:confused:

Did it look as if that bird could have swam to a point or was it just swiming is circles/flapping around? --1pheas4
 
Blewbijou, I have to ask you this because I lost a few roosters that were shot over water this year. I've never seen a pheasant swim before but it was obvious those birds I lost had to swim. They just disapeared.:confused:

Did it look as if that bird could have swam to a point or was it just swiming is circles/flapping around? --1pheas4

Let me tell you pheasants can swim. They will also hide out in the water. Last year JP was acting birdy next to a flooded wooded slough. Just as he dove into the chest high (for a springer) water I saw just the pheasants head sticking up from the water. He came up and I hit him pretty hard (so i thought) and he landed about 50yds from us in the slough. JP tore after him in this "running water" and I lost sight of him about JP about 75yds out. I could here JP thrashing in the water for what seemed like an eternity before he came back with that water logged rooster, still very much alive. Let me tell you that rooster exploded very hard even being completely submerged in water.
 
Blewbijou, I have to ask you this because I lost a few roosters that were shot over water this year. I've never seen a pheasant swim before but it was obvious those birds I lost had to swim. They just disapeared.:confused:

Did it look as if that bird could have swam to a point or was it just swiming is circles/flapping around? --1pheas4

He did not flap!! He just swam!!! :cheers:
 
Two years ago I saw a rooster standing in the middle of a 200+ foot bridge (I'm guessing on length but it it a good sized bridge) just West of Clay Center, KS. It is the bridge that crossed the Republican River for those that know the area. It was weird. I drove by at 65 mph and he just looked at me and I looked back.
 
Flying thru the 2nd story window of adjacent house after my buddy and I flushed a rooster from the road ditch and missed.


A road ditch?:eek:

For me was duck hunting and one came and landed right in front of me and the dog about 3 feet away. Her and I both looked at each other like No way, then she flushed him and I shot him sitting down on the ground.:D
 
I have a picture of no less than 10 pheasants (mostly roosters) sitting in a tree by the side of the road. There was a covey of quail in the tree next to it. This was the night before opener 2 years ago. The pic quality isn't great, but you can tell they're pheasants and you can see the quail. These were all wild birds. I'll see if I can scrounge up the pic for you guys and post it (I know I haven't put it in photobucket yet).

Didn't know wild pheasants did such things. Quail, yes.
 
1) Seen 'em in trees several times - funniest was last year when I saw 1/2 dozen or so on two different occasions in the trees of a rural cemetary in SE Colorado. Granted, that cemetary is in the corner of a cornfield, but it was still pretty funny. They would just fly back and forth between the all-but-bare ground and the pine trees. If I got close, some would actually try to hide behind the gravestones! Wish I'd got a pic, but I didn't.

2) Once I winged one in a river bottom. He took off running straight for the river. There was an inch of new snow, so it was easy to track him. He went into a hole in the bank, less than a foot above water level. I didn't know what to think, but couldn't see anywhere else he could have escaped, so I finally reached in and sure enough - felt tail feathers! He scratched me up pretty good, but I got him out.

3) A different river bottom (the Arkansas), I again winged one and he dropped in the river. I watched him swim to the other side, but it was too deep to cross, so I had to run up river a 1/4 mile or so to cross. I ran back down, figuring he'd be long gone, but when I got close, I saw something that looked like a snag, right next to the bank. When I got closer, it was a very bedraggled and 9/10's dead rooster. I felt pretty sorry for that one!

4) Same year, same river bottom - had my dog (Spencer) with me this time and was working in a small clearing, with a tree line between me and the nearest field. I heard some cackling and looked up to see three roosters headed right at me between a gap in the trees. I kept waiting for them to flare off, but they didn't - somehow they didn't see us. They came within 10 yards of me, maybe 5 from Spence, and flared for landing, cackling the whole time. Spence jumped after the lead bird, and of course then they all beat wings as fast as they could in 3 different directions. Spence's mouth was within a foot or so of that bird. I didn't even get a shot off, I was so shocked!
 
Rooster running threw the middle of town in, in down town gilbert Az. Had to be a pen raised bird I don't know. Some ones Pet? Loved it how now can guess?:)
 
Arkansas - used to be a few here as well as in the bootheel of Missouri

The fact that there are still wild pheasants in S. E. Missouri (Bootheel) and N. E. Arkansas clearly shows wild pheasants don't obey man made precepts on where pheasants can or cannot live.

The S.E. Missouri pheasants are remnants of wilder strains on pen raised pheasants released in that area years ago (1960's and 1970's). The birds were wilder strains of Korean Ringneck, White-Winged Pheasant (Afghan Whitewing) and Eastern Iranian Pheasant (looks similar to a white-winged pheasant) all true pheasants ringneck type.
See article below:
http://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Wilson/v077n04/p0409-p0414.pdf

Pheasants don't stop at state borders, so the Bootheel pheasants expanded into N. E. Arkansas.
The same thing happened 60 to 70 years ago when wild S. W. Kansas and N. W. Oklahoma pheasants lowly expanded into the northern Texas Panhandle. Liberal, Kansas is only around 50 or 60 miles from Perryton, Texas.

I have seen wild pheasants all over Ft. Riley Kansas, when I was stationed there years ago, sometimes 10 or 15 miles from the nearest grain field.
 
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