rebelp74 wrote:Yeah I have a yacht, suck it bitches!
FlintRiverFowler wrote:Fire ants
DeadEye_Dan wrote:I kill (or attempt to kill) every cat I see
waterfowlman wrote:Years ago I heard a knowledgeable biologist speak of the feral cat issue. He explained there were approximately 50 million feral cats in the US....but there could be more! If each cat only kills 20 young animals (baby rabbits, pheasants, quail, ducks etc) per year that would amount to somewhere around ONE BILLION wildlife animals killed by cats alone annually.
I've been killing every one that crosses my path ever since I heard that speech.
sws002 wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Fire ants
This one has me perplexed, really never heard of it. Care to elaborate?
GadwallGetter530 wrote:sws002 wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Fire ants
This one has me perplexed, really never heard of it. Care to elaborate?
I've seen them go after upland and waterfowl eggs before..... and they aren't broken. Freshly laid and health eggs.
GadwallGetter530 wrote:Our pheasant population has been on life support for the past 10 years. I don't see it improving any time in the future unless drastic measures are takin to save the wild birds. Valley quail and turkeys on the other hand are doin just fine. Populations are even improving.
sws002 wrote:GadwallGetter530 wrote:sws002 wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Fire ants
This one has me perplexed, really never heard of it. Care to elaborate?
I've seen them go after upland and waterfowl eggs before..... and they aren't broken. Freshly laid and health eggs.
Okay now you really have to elaborate! What do you mean "go after"? Are those fuckers capable of penetrating an egg?
sws002 wrote:GadwallGetter530 wrote:Our pheasant population has been on life support for the past 10 years. I don't see it improving any time in the future unless drastic measures are takin to save the wild birds. Valley quail and turkeys on the other hand are doin just fine. Populations are even improving.
What's crazy, is it doesn't take much to maintain a healthy pheasant population, they are very hardy birds. Western Nebraska (Sandhills) is loaded with them, and I attribute it entirely to the fact that the land out there is much more pasture than it is crop land. Corn and soybeans are good food, but they don't provide any cover come winter and they don't provide the food needed for the chicks.
3geese4me wrote:I think next to predator management, land access will be the key to sportsman heading afield in the near future. It is beginning to be a "who you know" sport. Even up here in ND land is being posted by exponential numbers every year and those that know the farmers are the ones having successful seasons.
3geese4me wrote:I think next to predator management, land access will be the key to sportsman heading afield in the near future. It is beginning to be a "who you know" sport. Even up here in ND land is being posted by exponential numbers every year and those that know the farmers are the ones having successful seasons.
sws002 wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Fire ants
This one has me perplexed, really never heard of it. Care to elaborate?
FlintRiverFowler wrote:sws002 wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Fire ants
This one has me perplexed, really never heard of it. Care to elaborate?
From what I was told was that the chicks would hatch out and eat them and they would live, bite them from the inside and kill them.
A bed of fire ants can take down a full grown cow.
sws002 wrote:FlintRiverFowler wrote:Fire ants
This one has me perplexed, really never heard of it. Care to elaborate?
AKPirate wrote:Jason is usually right but sometimes wrong
sws002 wrote:3geese4me wrote:I think next to predator management, land access will be the key to sportsman heading afield in the near future. It is beginning to be a "who you know" sport. Even up here in ND land is being posted by exponential numbers every year and those that know the farmers are the ones having successful seasons.
You know, I would argue predator management is actually a small, small part of it. Coyotes, coons, skunks, quail and turkeys co-existed for thousands of years before we got here, and I just simply don't believe we can put a large enough dent in the predator population to really affect anything. Don't get me wrong, it can't hurt, but I think habitat loss is where the real issues lie. Even if there are coyotes and hawks out the ass, as long as there are ample places to hide, there will always be birds.
However, the most frightening thing is the "who you know" aspect. Hunting has become such big business, and he with the deepest pockets wins. The lease right next to ours this year had several guys who pay between $1-3000 a seat, and they only hunt once or twice a year. It is quickly becoming an exclusively pay to play game, and it makes me wonder what it will take for the bottom to fall out of it.
banknote wrote:I believe a lot of it has to do with food, namely protein in the form of bugs. We do a lot to control bug populations, especially in the spring when young birds need them.
Also, when it comes to pheasants, they're not native birds living in natural habitat. They're imported and thrive where agriculture has created a new kind of habitat. As farming practices have evolved, so has that habitat. It stands to reason that cleaner, more efficient farming leaves less for the birds, in terms of both cover and feed.
assateague wrote:Put that in your huff-n-puffer and smoke it, shootin' boy.
bill herian wrote:Gotta pick between turkeys and quail. Can't have both.
ducks~n~bucks wrote::lol: Hey gaddy, I guess no one listens to you.
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