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Author Topic: SoDak - Pheasant Opener (T-Minus 41 Days)  (Read 1301 times)

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Offline OWLL Oak Wood Lakes Lodge

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  • "OWLL" Oak Wood Lakes Lodge - SD Hunting/Lodging
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 :bump:Greetings Wingshooters!  OWLL Reporting from South Dakota here.  Well the SoDak pheasant report came out last week.  It was dismal to say the least.  Numbers throughout the pheasant belt are consistantly down due to a couple of re-appearing factors:  1st rough winters; 2nd wet springs; 3rd Continued trend of losing CPR acres; 4th And maybe even the Pheasants are not traveling out this year due to the economy :scratch:.  Bottomline: There are still well over 6 million ringnecks roaming around SoDak this year, yes significantly down from the past three years of 10 million plus.  Below is a article from the Traveling Wingshoot email series on the Pheasant Forecast up and down Pheasant alley.  You'll see condition are challenging in all Pheasant Country State's this year.

Good Luck this year--the birds are out there, you'll just have to work a little harder!

HUNT DAKOTA @ Oak Wood Lakes Lodge -- Your DIY Pheasant HQ  www.owllhunting.com
www.owllhunting.com  Let me know if I can help!

From the Traveling Wingshooter email series: The 2011 Pheasant Forecast
By Larry Brown
An extremely harsh winter across the heart of the pheasant range in the Midwest -- the last in a string of bad winters in some states -- plus a wet spring in the Dakotas and Minnesota, and the continued loss of Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) acres, all combine to mean tougher prospects for ringneck hunters in the traditional top states.

SOUTH DAKOTA was #1 for pheasants again last year. The 2010 harvest of 1.8 million was the eighth straight season in which the total bag topped the million and a half mark.

Unfortunately, the state suffered its harshest winter since 1996-97, combined with an unusually wet spring and a loss of 400,000 CRP acres since 2007. As a result, it was no surprise that this year's brood survey showed a 46 percent decline from last year, and was 41 percent below the 10-year average. But as bad as that sounds, pheasant numbers appear similar to 2002, when hunters bagged a million and a quarter roosters.

KANSAS ranked a strong #2 last year, with hunters there harvesting over a million birds for the first time since the early 1980s. And this year's spring crowing count was up slightly compared to last year.

However, Mother Nature hasn't been kind to Kansas either. While the issue farther north has been too much rain, it's been the opposite in Kansas: a drought in the western part of the state. Although the breeding population there is extremely strong, reproduction was probably poor. The birds depend upon a good wheat crop, and the drought left hens short of necessary nesting cover.

Because of the drought, prospects in the southwest and south-central look poor this year, with better opportunities in the central, north-central, and northwest regions.

Last year’s pheasant harvest in NORTH DAKOTA, at 553,000, was down about 100,000 from 2009. North Dakota has seen the most severe CRP losses in the region (over a million acres from peak enrollment), and the state also experienced a hard winter followed by a very wet spring and record-setting floods in some areas.

Statewide, crowing counts this spring were down 14 percent. Although southwest North Dakota reported a 5 percent increase, all other regions were down, with the sharpest drop in the southeast (30 percent), where CRP losses have been the worst.


Pheasant hunters in NEBRASKA harvested 252,000 roosters last year, which was down just slightly from 2009. This year, indications are that hunting should be regionally good in the southwest. The east will be generally poor, due to reduced CRP acres and following a harsh winter. The central and panhandle regions should provide fair opportunities.

Much of the MINNESOTA pheasant range suffered the unfortunate harsh winter/wet spring combination. The harvest had increased to over half a million birds annually from 2005-08, but fell to 400,000 in 2009, and to 360,000 last year. The state also lost 120,000 acres of CRP this year. And from next year on, those losses will increase to about 200,000 acres per year.

IOWA's 2010 harvest of just 238,000 roosters set yet another record low, for the fourth straight year. When you consider that Iowa topped the million mark as recently as 2003, and was the top pheasant state in the nation more years than not during the '90s, it demonstrates just how quickly a state can go from boom to bust, when bad weather combines with habitat losses.

And this year's news is even worse, with the August roadside counts down 40 percent statewide. Even the northwest region, which had retained decent bird numbers, dropped significantly -- although northwest and central Iowa remain the state's best areas.   


Call the OWLL @ 605-695-5543 to reserve a spot to hunt Dakota Ringnecks today!
Email the OWLL @ owllhunting@gmail.com to start a tradition for your friends/family today!
Oak Wood Lakes Lodge
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