Free: Contests & Raffles.
Duck tape.
This is primarily directed toward pheasants. It's so if you get stopped by the gamies, they can tell if you have a rooster or hen. Probably less of an issue in Western Wa with the release program vs Eastern Wa where hens are not legal, but I have been checked at Western Wa release sites and the birds inspected. In other states ie Montana/South Dakota etc, you either need an attached head or leg demonstrating the rooster's spur on all your cleaned birds. (exception is Kooches in Winner SD who has an agreement for processing the cleaned birds with the state). This goes for transport of your birds and states like Montana will check your birds, so follow their upland rules. Last year I believe you needed and attached head or leg with spur. Sometimes kind of makes for a mess with the frozen head/foot attached in your freezer and when you are getting ready to cook.
Quote from: labsetters on June 17, 2014, 04:29:12 PMThis is primarily directed toward pheasants. It's so if you get stopped by the gamies, they can tell if you have a rooster or hen. Probably less of an issue in Western Wa with the release program vs Eastern Wa where hens are not legal, but I have been checked at Western Wa release sites and the birds inspected. In other states ie Montana/South Dakota etc, you either need an attached head or leg demonstrating the rooster's spur on all your cleaned birds. (exception is Kooches in Winner SD who has an agreement for processing the cleaned birds with the state). This goes for transport of your birds and states like Montana will check your birds, so follow their upland rules. Last year I believe you needed and attached head or leg with spur. Sometimes kind of makes for a mess with the frozen head/foot attached in your freezer and when you are getting ready to cook.Not to be a smart*** but body color and tail feathers alone should be enough to identify a rooster versus hen pheasant. If this is for field dressed birds, okay, I'll buy into that. But they don't specify and I don't gut my birds in the field.The other scenario that comes to mind is once in a great while heads get blown off when birds are shot. It happens.
Leave the head on the bird until you get home.