Two Shots - Two Pheasants
by Adam JohnsonA
light wind rustles the tops of the standing corn and gently
whips the grasses next to the fenceline. It’s a perfect day
for a couple of hunters and an eager canine to chase a few
roosters from the cover.
Finding good cover for
these beautiful birds - that are technically an exotic
species - is getting tougher every year. Landowners have
drained and planted on even the marginal cover that was
available a few years back and a lot of CRP I used to hunt
is gone, but one benefit is that the roosters are more
concentrated in what is left. A distant cackle generates a
feeling of optimism as we step into the field.
The ring-necked pheasant is
the species hunters target. Credit for the introduction of
this bird that falls into the genus Phasianus is attributed
to Judge O.N. Denny who released some 100 pairs of Chinese
ring-necks in the Willamette Valley of Oregon in 1881. From
that time forward, pheasants have been raised and released
by government agencies, clubs and individuals, and these
hardy birds have established populations anywhere suitable
habitat can be found.
The first bird we flushed
was a hen, which excited the dog even more. I hate to make
a dog work close, but the season was still young and the
birds we were hoping to send some buckshot at were the
first-year, uneducated roosters. These birds tend to hold
better and flush in decent range. Later in the season I’ll
let the dog chase those wily old roosters that have been
dodging game loads all season, but right now I didn’t feel
like the workout.
While pheasants were first
stocked in Oregon in 1881 the first actual hunt in that
state didn’t take place until 1892. On that opening day,
50,000 pheasants were killed and many other states began to
import pheasants for hunting.
My favorite pheasant
introduction story happened in Iowa. Iowa’s first
ring-necks were introduced accidentally when in the year
1900 a heavy windstorm destroyed the holding pens of game
breeder William Benton of Cedar Falls. This released into
the wild about 2,000 birds. Those pheasant spread north and
west and constitute Iowa’s founding stock. Iowa’s DNR began
stocking birds themselves around 1910.
The next two birds that
flushed must have heard us because they were out of range.
Two nice roosters that had likely been running ahead of us
since when we entered the field. They were smart enough to
head for a corn field we didn’t have access to. About two
minutes later a couple more hens flushed right in front of
us.
The ring-necked pheasant
has two means of dodging predators. It can run, very fast,
and dodge through tiny lanes that zig and zag through the
cover. Or, it can fly. Hunters soon discover that roosters
will use both of these defense mechanisms to keep from
hearing that pop and feeling either a whoosh of shot go
whistling by or the sting of a well-placed shot.
After a couple more
roosters busted out of the cover too far out for us to get
shots at we were thinking we needed to keep our mouths shut
and work a little slower. This was going to be a good call
because now the dog had settled into a nice distance in
front of us and was working the cover perfectly.
Everyone always knows when
their dog gets “birdy” and this will surely put a hunter on
high alert. The dog looked like it had just locked onto a
scent and was going to start chasing a running bird when two
roosters busted out of the grass right in front of me.
I leveled the gun at the
first bird and pulled the trigger; it dropped. The second
bird had picked up the downwind help of that breeze and was
just about to start picking up speed so I slid the barrel
out past its nose and watched it tumble after I squeezed off
a shot.
The dog was working the
spot where the first bird went down so I hightailed it over
to where the second bird dropped. Fortunately that pheasant
had hit the ground dead. The dog quickly found the first
bird and I was feeling great. Two pheasants, two shots. A
great hunt.
We downed a couple more
roosters before the hunt was over, but nothing as exciting
as those first two birds that flushed in range. It was a
great hunt and one of the prime reasons I find the fields of
grass and narrow bands of uncut corn an environment too hard
to resist in the fall.
Adam Johnson is an Aquatic
Biologist and professional outdoorsman. He can be reached
at
www.adamjohnsonoutdoors.com .