Jiffy
★★★★★ Legendary Member
The majestic gut pile eaters are definitely around A LOT more than back in the day.
Interesting about owls and hawks together on your place as they are enemies like yotes/wolves.I have same problem feed lots of everything and damn owls in late fall move in with hawks and fox move in to wish I could get rid of few of ones we can't like giving them free meal. Had over 20 plus roosters this morning feeding damn cold out I even put up small haybale fort for them to get out of weather or inside they not smartest.
Couple hundred yards away…I dropped a goose a couple yards away a week ago…i was halfway to it when a bald eagle got em before me
The old timers used to say the reason there were so many pheasants when they were growing up is because of straw piles from threshing machines. The straw piles provided shelter and a winters supply of food.I have same problem feed lots of everything and damn owls in late fall move in with hawks and fox move in to wish I could get rid of few of ones we can't like giving them free meal. Had over 20 plus roosters this morning feeding damn cold out I even put up small haybale fort for them to get out of weather or inside they not smartest.
I've never seen roosters kill a hen but have watched them run the hens off the food a lot and the hens look a lot thinner than the roosters in hard winters. I like to thin the roosters off the feed piles if the winter gets tough just to give the hens a break. Reminds me of how old does and bucks sometimes will chase fawns off of bait piles.Interesting about owls and hawks together on your place as they are enemies like yotes/wolves.
Good on you helping the critters our during these fridged times.
I get together with a few farm hands amlnd farmers that like to hunt,every year we get together late season to thin the rooster population as im told when food gets scarce mid winter rooster's kill off hen's i have never seen evidence of this just here say.
Makes for a fun hunt tho gettin together, heaven forbid missing a easy shot,you'll never live it down.
They are just trying to keep the fawns from catching the cwd at the bait pile.I've never seen roosters kill a hen but have watched them run the hens off the food a lot and the hens look a lot thinner than the roosters in hard winters. I like to thin the roosters off the feed piles if the winter gets tough just to give the hens a break. Reminds me of how old does and bucks sometimes will chase fawns off of bait piles.
Aaaww.. animals are such good parents.They are just trying to keep the fawns from catching the cwd at the bait pile.
Probably a lot of truth in that.The old timers used to say the reason there were so many pheasants when they were growing up is because of straw piles from threshing machines. The straw piles provided shelter and a winters supply of food.
The old timers used to say the reason there were so many pheasants when they were growing up is because of straw piles from threshing machines. The straw piles provided shelter and a winters supply of food.
The dead don’t speak or eat. Why discriminate?you will never make a difference killing predator birds to save upland birds. better off trapping skunks coons and cats
I concur, late 80's central nebraska we had several sections of crp to hunt,late season pheasants grouped up by the 100's,send the dog in birds flushed like flocks of blackbirds,rush of wings and rooster cackle, i would never believe one day this scene would never be in later years but ^^^ same deal,CRP went back to production ditches burned no more pheasants we few and far between.I remember the years of Soil bank and having lots of Pheasant in S.E. N.D. Then the spring if 1966 and that really thinned them down and Soil bank went back into production. The Pheasant never really came back till CRP showed up. Then the winter of 1996 and 1997 thinned them down again. We had nice winters till 2010. But after that they came back again till about 2015 and 2016 when we lost all the CRP to production. The Pheasant population will never come back unless CRP or Soil Bank shows back up