Bootlipkiller wrote:waterfowlman wrote:GadwallGetter530 wrote:Yeah, the good old days. Funny thing. It wasn't all that long ago.
Sounds like you need to get some good trappers in that area to thin out the predators. I'll bet when there were strong, healthy pheasant populations there were also professional trappers working that area keeping the bobcats, foxes, coons etc. thinned out.
Just a guess on my part but very possible.
I think it's a combo with the mosquito abatement theory being a big part. Just in my life time I've seen farming practices change a lot. Farmers disk and spray all the vegetation around their fields and along gravel roads in the name of weed prevention. This is happening all over the valley and these areas that use to hold huntable numbers of pheasants no longer exist. More rice is also flooded now and what's not flooded is disked in the fall leaving no stubble for the birds. Less cover makes the birds more susceptible to predation. All these changes with the war on west Nile and we got problems.
Boot, why the sudden attention to weeds surrounding production crop? Is there a major shift to organic in the area? Or are they just farming every available inch?