Pheasant hunting

JVAR

Well-Known Member
Mar 27, 2006
1,020
962
113
Eagle Grove, IA
With pheasant season approaching, I had to start a thread. Who is going out this weekend? I am going to hunt in North Central Iowa. A lot of farmers I have talked to report they are scarce, with one saying he didn't even see a pheasant when harvesting corn this year. His place is usually good for 10 to 15 roosters a year. I have talked to a few that have seen a decent number. I am hoping there are some decent areas that have a few birds, but the DNR report of a 40% drop from last year has tempered my enthusiasm a little. I have a German Longhaired Pointer and I think they dryness will make scenting conditions difficult after the morning dew is gone. I still look forward to opening day, however. What do you guys think???
 

BigLame

Well-Known Member
Feb 6, 2008
5,150
2,228
113
Western IA
A good amount of corn should be out, but with low numbers it is going to be tough no matter what.
If you know of/find a place with birds, good luck (and don't tell anyone).
The way their habitat has dwindled, only way to have good hunts may be to go to the Dakotas. Sad.
 

CYVADER

Well-Known Member
Nov 16, 2006
5,386
242
63
Cornfields
south dakotas numbers are supposedly way down also. i'll be sitting in a tree rather than hunting for a mythical rooster this year.
 

cyeah

Well-Known Member
May 23, 2006
3,845
27
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Houston, TX
Go to South Dakota or another state the cares about pheasants and hunting dollars associated.

Iowa has quit caring long ago and the numbers show it.
 

M6WS6

Member
Jan 24, 2011
323
9
18
Ames, IA
My pheasant hunting excitement has dwindled the last few years, and I hunt back home with my dad in a decent area of Iowa to hunt and still not excited. (because of the lack of birds)

Thank God for ducks and geese!
 

StClone

Well-Known Member
Dec 17, 2009
5,691
3,029
113
Wisconsin
With pheasant season approaching, I had to start a thread. Who is going out this weekend? I am going to hunt in North Central Iowa. A lot of farmers I have talked to report they are scarce, with one saying he didn't even see a pheasant when harvesting corn this year. His place is usually good for 10 to 15 roosters a year. I have talked to a few that have seen a decent number. I am hoping there are some decent areas that have a few birds, but the DNR report of a 40% drop from last year has tempered my enthusiasm a little. I have a German Longhaired Pointer and I think they dryness will make scenting conditions difficult after the morning dew is gone. I still look forward to opening day, however. What do you guys think???

I drove backroads from Central Wisconsin, through Iowa to SW Iowa then into South West Minnesota. The only place I saw Ring-necks was around the Windom Minnesota area and south and west of there. Large areas of DNR land seems to be the reason.
 

dtISU

Well-Known Member
Nov 17, 2010
2,603
922
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A suburb of Ames
There used to be some really great hunting around Coon Rapids. The Garst Seed Company family had a lot of land around there and tried to develop it for pheasant habitat. A buddy of mine was from CR and we had some great days around there. My retriever would be worn out by the end of the day. Any word of birds around there?
 

Wesley

Well-Known Member
Apr 12, 2006
70,923
546
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Omaha
I had a peasant, sorry, I mean pheasant, almost hit my windshield near Hartley on Sunday.
 

RayShimley

Well-Known Member
Sep 9, 2008
6,298
343
83
42
White Bear Lake, MN
There used to be some really great hunting around Coon Rapids. The Garst Seed Company family had a lot of land around there and tried to develop it for pheasant habitat. A buddy of mine was from CR and we had some great days around there. My retriever would be worn out by the end of the day. Any word of birds around there?

I'm pretty sure the land you are thinking of has been put into a trust by the Garst's and is now the White Rock Conservancy.

They allow hunting, but you have to make reservations and use their guide service.

Whiterock Conservancy - Whiterock Conservancy Home
 

dtISU

Well-Known Member
Nov 17, 2010
2,603
922
113
A suburb of Ames
I'm pretty sure the land you are thinking of has been put into a trust by the Garst's and is now the White Rock Conservancy.

They allow hunting, but you have to make reservations and use their guide service.

Whiterock Conservancy - Whiterock Conservancy Home

I guess that's the way a lot of the good ground is going these days. Back then we could just go up to the owner's house, knock on the door and ask if we could hunt their ground. Lots of times we would leave a couple of cleaned birds for the owner to say thanks if he let us.
 

bringmagicback

Well-Known Member
Dec 3, 2009
7,858
1,113
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CF Resident Dog Lover
So far this year I've been over 2000 acres and seen 3 birds. I've seen more bald eagles than roosters. Most want to blame it on farmers and habitat destruction which is mind blowing. Other years we say weather, can't do that this year. What's left? Predators in my opinion are the problem. I coyote hunt and there are more yotes than I've ever seen,but the real problem is hawks. At any given time, I can look out and see 15-20 hawks. I think about the time they banned hawk hunting is when our population began its decline. I also support a season ban for 3 years and see what happens. As hunters we should also be conservationists and I don't see how saying "whelp no birds this year but let's go shoot what's left" is going to help. We will be enforcing no hunting on all our land this year
 

intrepid27

Well-Known Member
Oct 9, 2006
6,011
5,079
113
Marion, IA
I think its the "perfect storm of everything you just mentioned. 3 years of bad wether, loss of habitat, and increased predators.

Not sure if not hunting will make much difference as DNR claims you can harvest 70 % of roosters and have no effect on numbers. Last year I heard the South Dakota DNR (or whatever they are) was begging guys to shoot more roosters at the end of the season because they did not want them competeing with the hens for food and habitat.
 

dtISU

Well-Known Member
Nov 17, 2010
2,603
922
113
A suburb of Ames
I think its the "perfect storm of everything you just mentioned. 3 years of bad wether, loss of habitat, and increased predators.

Not sure if not hunting will make much difference as DNR claims you can harvest 70 % of roosters and have no effect on numbers. Last year I heard the South Dakota DNR (or whatever they are) was begging guys to shoot more roosters at the end of the season because they did not want them competeing with the hens for food and habitat.

Another big factor is the hatch each spring. Yep, you want to have as many previous year hens around as you can.
 

bringmagicback

Well-Known Member
Dec 3, 2009
7,858
1,113
83
CF Resident Dog Lover
I think its the "perfect storm of everything you just mentioned. 3 years of bad wether, loss of habitat, and increased predators.

Not sure if not hunting will make much difference as DNR claims you can harvest 70 % of roosters and have no effect on numbers. Last year I heard the South Dakota DNR (or whatever they are) was begging guys to shoot more roosters at the end of the season because they did not want them competeing with the hens for food and habitat.

I never thought about the competition thing, but I really don't buy that there isn't habitat and food for all the birds. I just don't see it as a problem. I think birds are just stupid and don't know where they should live. I go to spots where birds surely should be and nothing. We need a habitat awareness program to let them know about available housing.
 

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