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10 Pheasant-Hunting Tips
Keep these 10 tips in mind to get more pheasants in your sights. (November 2007)

Photo by D. Robert Franz

From hot, dry weather early in the season to crowded conditions at state wildlife areas where birds are released, pheasant hunting can be a challenge. Yet veteran hunters have learned to use weather, heavy hunting pressure and wary birds to their advantage and shoot bag limits of roosters each fall.

Here are 10 tips from some of the best pheasant hunters around --hunting guides, state wildlife area managers and hunting club owners --on how to find more birds on public and private lands through the West.

1. USE A GOOD BIRD DOG
Each fall, many hunters are successful by walking through cover and flushing birds without a dog. But the most successful hunters are those with a good bird dog, be it a Lab or a pointer. Not only will a dog help you find more pheasants and other upland birds, but can also track down pheasants after they are shot.


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"I've noticed that really good bird dogs are a huge advantage," says Vince Oredson, a state wildlife area manager in Oregon. "I've seen fields get hunted over and over throughout the day. And then someone with a dog with a good nose will go in and find birds right away."

Some hunters prefer Labs, which are excellent at flushing pheasants from heavy cover and also unmatched when it comes to tracking down birds after they are shot.

Others like a pointer, which will locate pheasants hiding in grass and brush and let their owner know exactly where they are.

"A flushing dog that can get into the heavy cattails and other cover can be an advantage in the middle of the day," Oredson says.

"The pointer dogs work better in the shorter grass where the birds will be early in the morning."

Burt Holzhauser owns the Rising Sun Hunting Preserve in California, one of the West's best private-land pheasant hunting areas. He utilizes both Labs and English setters at his ranch.

"You have to have a dog," Holzhauser says. "You lose too many birds because you knock them down and won't be able to find them without a dog."

Some private hunting clubs provide dogs and handlers for an additional charge.

2. LEARN TO DRIVE BIRDS
Jeremy Eubank is a very successful hunting and fishing guide from eastern Washington. He likes to drive pheasants early in the season when hot, dry weather limits success for many hunters.

Eubank's technique works with or without dogs, although his Lab helps him bag even more birds. He will have one or more hunters take position at the top of a hill or ridge and wait. Then he pushes the birds to them by walking a slow zigzag pattern through brush and other cover.

Pheasants will often retreat uphill, running through the cover and then fly once the cover ends. That's where the other hunter should be stationed.

Eubank cautions hunters to avoid pushing pheasants downhill. They will often take off flying before they near the hunters waiting to ambush them.

3. HUNT NEAR WATER
Oredson, the manager of Denman Wildlife Area in southern Oregon, and Holzhauser -- whose Siskiyou County, Calif., ranch is rated as one of the best pheasant hunting destinations anywhere -- get chances to see pheasants under all types of weather conditions. Early in the season and during dry weather patterns, pheasants will often hang out in areas with lots of water.

"They are going to be closer to the water holes," Holzhauser says of birds in dry weather. "They are going to be in the good cover."

Oredson agrees: "The birds will gravitate to streams and water holes during hot weather."

Also look for birds near other water sources, aside from with streams and ponds -- such as faucets, irrigation canals, livestock watering containers, pump houses and irrigation equipment.


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