Free: Contests & Raffles.
Quote from: AspenBud on May 06, 2014, 01:24:12 PMHonestly if you have to talk predators as it relates to pheasants then you're already in trouble. If you look at the pheasant strongholds in this country they are crawling with predators and yet the birds still thrive.The difference is habitat. It is the beginning, middle, and end as far as pheasants go.That's not to say predator management doesn't help, but that alone isn't going to save the birds or bring them back to where they were.I hunted South Dakota a few years back, and well, it was ridiculous how many birds there were in the fields we hunted. So many in fact, that it really wasn't all that fun (if you can believe that). But these properties were managed for birds and birds only, with permanent cover, water and food, primarily milo. Plenty of coyotes running around too. There are places in WA that still have that kind of cover for one reason or another, and lo and behold, there are a lots of birds there too. Unfortunately they are just few and far between nowadays.
Honestly if you have to talk predators as it relates to pheasants then you're already in trouble. If you look at the pheasant strongholds in this country they are crawling with predators and yet the birds still thrive.The difference is habitat. It is the beginning, middle, and end as far as pheasants go.That's not to say predator management doesn't help, but that alone isn't going to save the birds or bring them back to where they were.
If anybody could solve this, Wacenturion could.Back when I was a kid, the Basin was famous across the country for its pheasant hunting. It rivaled the Dakotas, and that's no easy feat. Clean farming, check.Pesticides, check.Predators, check.Management?
Quote from: singleshot12 on May 06, 2014, 11:34:45 AMQuote from: Wacenturion on May 06, 2014, 11:14:12 AMQuote from: singleshot12 on May 06, 2014, 10:37:11 AMQuote from: Wacenturion on May 06, 2014, 10:31:51 AMQuote from: singleshot12 on May 06, 2014, 10:27:56 AMQuote from: Bullkllr on May 05, 2014, 08:44:04 PMLook at the cover in the pictures. There's more there within eyeshot than in a whole county these days.Cover,less predators,less pesticides and cleaner water, all major elements to have prolific wild birds. I'm not a member of PF (Pheasants Forever) but aren't they suppose to be working hard on better habitat management over there?I look at those pictures which wasn't THAT long ago and think Damn! why can't we have hunting like that again Volunteer groups like Pheasants Forever do raise money, however to really impact habitat, it takes equipment and manpower, which is only part of the equation. Volunteers not only are not equipped, but they don't have the time as well.I would also think farming practices would have to change drastically before anything positive could happen. Followed by proper predator control.No not really, but that would obviously help. If one understands the basic requirements for pheasants it's not difficult too come to a solution. Pheasants spend their entire lifetime essentially living within a 1-1/2 mile circle. That's their annual range. That's the basic foundation of understanding wildlife needs, irregardless of species. You just need permanent cover spread throughout the farmland in close proximity to each other so that individual annual ranges overlap. Without permanent cover...cattails, willows, basically unfarmed cover and left in a natural state, you won't have pheasant's, or much else for that matter.Just a small percentage of permanent habitat within the annual range circle so to speak, will basically allow a percentage of the population to exist within that small range where it does not now. Spread out small parcels of permanent cover adjacent to others (in the adjacent annual range circle), and you create adjoining populations. That's essentially what you had in the good old days....lots of individual populations overlapping each other throughout the Basin. Don't ask me how I know..............I developed and ran a statewide habitat restoration program for WDFW that did great things during the 90's, until reorganization put the program under Wildlife Management where it died. You see they think you can solve problems by continually going to meetings, planning, and making excuses for not getting their hands dirty...like in actual field work.It just takes time and effort to reverse a trend. It's amazing how quickly 10 years flys by when you're trying to put habitat back. It also takes time to grow it to where it's meaningful, especially in low precipitation ranges in eastern Washington. If it took 30 years to see it disappear, it takes time to put it back. However it's doable. Morons at WDFW didn't see the need. It's easier to pretend being a biologist for an entire career. Don't get me started on upland birds............ You all ready have but well stated I hear you, you make some good points. It's not an easy fix by any means when you look at the big picture. Seems easy on the outside to fix but.... I know enough about a wild born upland bird(grouse pheasant etc. to know in the first 2 weeks of life bugs and insects are crucial to their survival. IMO insecticides and or pesticides have wreaked havoc on the food chain for much wildlife,from the embryo to the hatched.It's pretty evident if you think about it that if you have good permanent cover here and there, you also have the following......protection from predators, both avian and groundShelter from the elements. Chicks still may get wet, but not nearly as much with dense woody cover...i.e. wood rose, multiflora rose etc.Last but not least.....with permanent cover you generally have undisturbed insect life....food source for those young chick as well as adults.As I said above, it all begins with permanent cover. Everything else falls in place.
Quote from: Wacenturion on May 06, 2014, 11:14:12 AMQuote from: singleshot12 on May 06, 2014, 10:37:11 AMQuote from: Wacenturion on May 06, 2014, 10:31:51 AMQuote from: singleshot12 on May 06, 2014, 10:27:56 AMQuote from: Bullkllr on May 05, 2014, 08:44:04 PMLook at the cover in the pictures. There's more there within eyeshot than in a whole county these days.Cover,less predators,less pesticides and cleaner water, all major elements to have prolific wild birds. I'm not a member of PF (Pheasants Forever) but aren't they suppose to be working hard on better habitat management over there?I look at those pictures which wasn't THAT long ago and think Damn! why can't we have hunting like that again Volunteer groups like Pheasants Forever do raise money, however to really impact habitat, it takes equipment and manpower, which is only part of the equation. Volunteers not only are not equipped, but they don't have the time as well.I would also think farming practices would have to change drastically before anything positive could happen. Followed by proper predator control.No not really, but that would obviously help. If one understands the basic requirements for pheasants it's not difficult too come to a solution. Pheasants spend their entire lifetime essentially living within a 1-1/2 mile circle. That's their annual range. That's the basic foundation of understanding wildlife needs, irregardless of species. You just need permanent cover spread throughout the farmland in close proximity to each other so that individual annual ranges overlap. Without permanent cover...cattails, willows, basically unfarmed cover and left in a natural state, you won't have pheasant's, or much else for that matter.Just a small percentage of permanent habitat within the annual range circle so to speak, will basically allow a percentage of the population to exist within that small range where it does not now. Spread out small parcels of permanent cover adjacent to others (in the adjacent annual range circle), and you create adjoining populations. That's essentially what you had in the good old days....lots of individual populations overlapping each other throughout the Basin. Don't ask me how I know..............I developed and ran a statewide habitat restoration program for WDFW that did great things during the 90's, until reorganization put the program under Wildlife Management where it died. You see they think you can solve problems by continually going to meetings, planning, and making excuses for not getting their hands dirty...like in actual field work.It just takes time and effort to reverse a trend. It's amazing how quickly 10 years flys by when you're trying to put habitat back. It also takes time to grow it to where it's meaningful, especially in low precipitation ranges in eastern Washington. If it took 30 years to see it disappear, it takes time to put it back. However it's doable. Morons at WDFW didn't see the need. It's easier to pretend being a biologist for an entire career. Don't get me started on upland birds............ You all ready have but well stated I hear you, you make some good points. It's not an easy fix by any means when you look at the big picture. Seems easy on the outside to fix but.... I know enough about a wild born upland bird(grouse pheasant etc. to know in the first 2 weeks of life bugs and insects are crucial to their survival. IMO insecticides and or pesticides have wreaked havoc on the food chain for much wildlife,from the embryo to the hatched.
Quote from: singleshot12 on May 06, 2014, 10:37:11 AMQuote from: Wacenturion on May 06, 2014, 10:31:51 AMQuote from: singleshot12 on May 06, 2014, 10:27:56 AMQuote from: Bullkllr on May 05, 2014, 08:44:04 PMLook at the cover in the pictures. There's more there within eyeshot than in a whole county these days.Cover,less predators,less pesticides and cleaner water, all major elements to have prolific wild birds. I'm not a member of PF (Pheasants Forever) but aren't they suppose to be working hard on better habitat management over there?I look at those pictures which wasn't THAT long ago and think Damn! why can't we have hunting like that again Volunteer groups like Pheasants Forever do raise money, however to really impact habitat, it takes equipment and manpower, which is only part of the equation. Volunteers not only are not equipped, but they don't have the time as well.I would also think farming practices would have to change drastically before anything positive could happen. Followed by proper predator control.No not really, but that would obviously help. If one understands the basic requirements for pheasants it's not difficult too come to a solution. Pheasants spend their entire lifetime essentially living within a 1-1/2 mile circle. That's their annual range. That's the basic foundation of understanding wildlife needs, irregardless of species. You just need permanent cover spread throughout the farmland in close proximity to each other so that individual annual ranges overlap. Without permanent cover...cattails, willows, basically unfarmed cover and left in a natural state, you won't have pheasant's, or much else for that matter.Just a small percentage of permanent habitat within the annual range circle so to speak, will basically allow a percentage of the population to exist within that small range where it does not now. Spread out small parcels of permanent cover adjacent to others (in the adjacent annual range circle), and you create adjoining populations. That's essentially what you had in the good old days....lots of individual populations overlapping each other throughout the Basin. Don't ask me how I know..............I developed and ran a statewide habitat restoration program for WDFW that did great things during the 90's, until reorganization put the program under Wildlife Management where it died. You see they think you can solve problems by continually going to meetings, planning, and making excuses for not getting their hands dirty...like in actual field work.It just takes time and effort to reverse a trend. It's amazing how quickly 10 years flys by when you're trying to put habitat back. It also takes time to grow it to where it's meaningful, especially in low precipitation ranges in eastern Washington. If it took 30 years to see it disappear, it takes time to put it back. However it's doable. Morons at WDFW didn't see the need. It's easier to pretend being a biologist for an entire career. Don't get me started on upland birds............
Quote from: Wacenturion on May 06, 2014, 10:31:51 AMQuote from: singleshot12 on May 06, 2014, 10:27:56 AMQuote from: Bullkllr on May 05, 2014, 08:44:04 PMLook at the cover in the pictures. There's more there within eyeshot than in a whole county these days.Cover,less predators,less pesticides and cleaner water, all major elements to have prolific wild birds. I'm not a member of PF (Pheasants Forever) but aren't they suppose to be working hard on better habitat management over there?I look at those pictures which wasn't THAT long ago and think Damn! why can't we have hunting like that again Volunteer groups like Pheasants Forever do raise money, however to really impact habitat, it takes equipment and manpower, which is only part of the equation. Volunteers not only are not equipped, but they don't have the time as well.I would also think farming practices would have to change drastically before anything positive could happen. Followed by proper predator control.
Quote from: singleshot12 on May 06, 2014, 10:27:56 AMQuote from: Bullkllr on May 05, 2014, 08:44:04 PMLook at the cover in the pictures. There's more there within eyeshot than in a whole county these days.Cover,less predators,less pesticides and cleaner water, all major elements to have prolific wild birds. I'm not a member of PF (Pheasants Forever) but aren't they suppose to be working hard on better habitat management over there?I look at those pictures which wasn't THAT long ago and think Damn! why can't we have hunting like that again Volunteer groups like Pheasants Forever do raise money, however to really impact habitat, it takes equipment and manpower, which is only part of the equation. Volunteers not only are not equipped, but they don't have the time as well.
Quote from: Bullkllr on May 05, 2014, 08:44:04 PMLook at the cover in the pictures. There's more there within eyeshot than in a whole county these days.Cover,less predators,less pesticides and cleaner water, all major elements to have prolific wild birds. I'm not a member of PF (Pheasants Forever) but aren't they suppose to be working hard on better habitat management over there?I look at those pictures which wasn't THAT long ago and think Damn! why can't we have hunting like that again
Look at the cover in the pictures. There's more there within eyeshot than in a whole county these days.
I really wish they would just do away with all pheasant release sites, even in western Washington. If people want to shoot planted birds, let them buy their own. If there were no pheasants to hunt, habitat would be much higher on the priority list, and maybe eventually we'd have wild birds to hunt again.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Singleshot12.........cheaper in the long run to own small isolated parcels that you control stategiccally placed to take advantage of overlapping annual range circles. Add habitat retention or developement on adjacent private grounds to supplement. Ownerships change, prices of crops change, etc. You maintain control by owning small amounts that basically allow populations to exist and utilize crops etc on adjacent lands.
Dad use to take us over to the east side for pheasants but I haven't been over to the east side for pheasants since the kids started school and all the sports they've gotten into. Dad's in his 80's and a couple of hours on a release site is about good for him. I agree habitat improvement and access should be the top priority but again, if it were not for the release sites I would not have had the chance to share hunting time with my kids like my dad did with me.