Free: Contests & Raffles.
Cool little birds but they ain't a tater peeler or a boat floater for me,I prefer quail/huns or pheasants.Management of any of them is in US the hunters, the WDFW considers them all an "Introduced" specie and as such does not fund any management program, consider yourselves warned.Same goes for Huns/quail/Pheasants.It's all about the license money boys,when it plays out it plays out.Non native Upland birds ain't nothing more than gold with beating hearts,the management begins with you! on quail make sure a covey has at least 10 birds remaining when your done!I'd say chuks/huns need 6,pheasants don't matter much as they aren't covey birds but if you see 15 hens before you see a rooster it's a bad proposition.
Quote from: wildweeds on June 25, 2014, 11:01:17 PMCool little birds but they ain't a tater peeler or a boat floater for me,I prefer quail/huns or pheasants.Management of any of them is in US the hunters, the WDFW considers them all an "Introduced" specie and as such does not fund any management program, consider yourselves warned.Same goes for Huns/quail/Pheasants.It's all about the license money boys,when it plays out it plays out.Non native Upland birds ain't nothing more than gold with beating hearts,the management begins with you! on quail make sure a covey has at least 10 birds remaining when your done!I'd say chuks/huns need 6,pheasants don't matter much as they aren't covey birds but if you see 15 hens before you see a rooster it's a bad proposition.Quail are native to Washington.
Quote from: wildweeds on June 25, 2014, 11:01:17 PMCool little birds but they ain't a tater peeler or a boat floater for me,I prefer quail/huns or pheasants.Management of any of them is in US the hunters, the WDFW considers them all an "Introduced" specie and as such does not fund any management program, consider yourselves warned.Same goes for Huns/quail/Pheasants.It's all about the license money boys,when it plays out it plays out.Non native Upland birds ain't nothing more than gold with beating hearts,the management begins with you! on quail make sure a covey has at least 10 birds remaining when your done!I'd say chuks/huns need 6,pheasants don't matter much as they aren't covey birds but if you see 15 hens before you see a rooster it's a bad proposition.I must admit that I've only hunted barn chukar at shooting preserves, but if the wild variety are like their pen raised counterparts I will never understand the fascination with chukar. They don't taste that special to me and compared to a pheasant or ruffed grouse they are a nightmare to skin and gut. For all that climbing, not to mention potential snake issues for the dog I would wish for better.
Quote from: AspenBud on July 06, 2014, 06:37:29 AMQuote from: wildweeds on June 25, 2014, 11:01:17 PMCool little birds but they ain't a tater peeler or a boat floater for me,I prefer quail/huns or pheasants.Management of any of them is in US the hunters, the WDFW considers them all an "Introduced" specie and as such does not fund any management program, consider yourselves warned.Same goes for Huns/quail/Pheasants.It's all about the license money boys,when it plays out it plays out.Non native Upland birds ain't nothing more than gold with beating hearts,the management begins with you! on quail make sure a covey has at least 10 birds remaining when your done!I'd say chuks/huns need 6,pheasants don't matter much as they aren't covey birds but if you see 15 hens before you see a rooster it's a bad proposition. Only those that have made the thigh burning climb chasing wild birds understandI must admit that I've only hunted barn chukar at shooting preserves, but if the wild variety are like their pen raised counterparts I will never understand the fascination with chukar. They don't taste that special to me and compared to a pheasant or ruffed grouse they are a nightmare to skin and gut. For all that climbing, not to mention potential snake issues for the dog I would wish for better.When you climb up a ridge to find your dog on point, your chest is heaving, and there is your dog, stiff as a statue into the wind, and then a covey of 30 birds rockets up out of the sage 30-40 yds away, cackling and rocketing downhill, and you somehow manage to scratch one or two down, you'll think differently. Hunting a pen raised chukar on flat ground is like putt putt golf compared to the U.S. Open. Not even close to the same thing as wild birds (wish I could say that about pheasants). As for table fare, they are basically the same as a large quail. I don't know how it can get any better than that.
Quote from: wildweeds on June 25, 2014, 11:01:17 PMCool little birds but they ain't a tater peeler or a boat floater for me,I prefer quail/huns or pheasants.Management of any of them is in US the hunters, the WDFW considers them all an "Introduced" specie and as such does not fund any management program, consider yourselves warned.Same goes for Huns/quail/Pheasants.It's all about the license money boys,when it plays out it plays out.Non native Upland birds ain't nothing more than gold with beating hearts,the management begins with you! on quail make sure a covey has at least 10 birds remaining when your done!I'd say chuks/huns need 6,pheasants don't matter much as they aren't covey birds but if you see 15 hens before you see a rooster it's a bad proposition. Only those that have made the thigh burning climb chasing wild birds understandI must admit that I've only hunted barn chukar at shooting preserves, but if the wild variety are like their pen raised counterparts I will never understand the fascination with chukar. They don't taste that special to me and compared to a pheasant or ruffed grouse they are a nightmare to skin and gut. For all that climbing, not to mention potential snake issues for the dog I would wish for better.
I have never hunted chuckar, at least not yet. but they sound interesting to hunt! maybe i'll try this year, only if i can get my muttto hunt them properly!
Sitting here in downtown chukarville. Man oh man they are going crazy tonight . Come on next saturday. It can come soon enough. Hopefully it rains on the opener. Nothing better than hunting in the rain.