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I grew up in Montana and used to call them sage hens if we are talking about the same bird. When i was a kid there used to be quite a few of them. I guess not many made it to the ark.
How do you know for sure that it could not be a sage grouse? Alec did not post pics that I'm aware of.
I want to shoot a sage grouse soooooooo bad
Quote from: Curly on May 08, 2009, 05:02:53 PM How do you know for sure that it could not be a sage grouse? Alec did not post pics that I'm aware of.No one said it couldn't be a Sage Grouse. Until now . . . if it was near Winthrop, it wasn't a Sage Grouse. The habitat around the Winthrop area is all wrong for Sage Grouse. It's a completely different environment than that around Moses Coulee. There are Sage Grouse in northcentral Washington, but not in the higher, wetter, more wooded areas like Winthrop. As for it being a Prairie Chicken, well, it really couldn't have been that, either. They don't even exist in Washington. According to the Audubon Society, the very nearest Greater Prairie Chicken population is smack dab in the middle of South Dakota - that's half a continent away. The closest Lesser Prairie Chicken population is down where Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, and New Mexico meet. I really look forward to seeing the pictures - hope they get posted soon.PS: Here are a couple photos I took a couple weeks ago of a northcentral WA Sage Grouse. Keep in mind these are very large birds - approximately 3 times bigger than a Sharptail Grouse or a Prairie Chicken (6 to 7 pounds compared to 2 pounds). It'd be really hard to confuse a Greateer Sage Grouse with any other gamebird.