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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Waterfowl & Other Winged Interests
Solo Kansas Pheasants
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<blockquote data-quote="Mattt" data-source="post: 5720431" data-attributes="member: 16934"><p>Yup. Fish and game website usually has reports on whistle counts for quail and brood/nesting conditions etc. reports for pheasant/prairie chicken also. I mainly quail hunt but ditch chickens are about the same be prepared to spend a lot of time driving and putting eyes on habitat or lack of. Crp changes quite often and a lot of the ground that is enrolled in hunter access may have crp but no crop planted. Still awesome hunting. Give the dogs a little extra time and be patient. A lot of them have to adjust to the different environment and scent sometimes takes a day or two. Pheasant probably gonna be central to western ks. All the old bird towns are still that. Hays or hutch would be decent starting points. I really like Kansas. They did a good job of putting the interstate in the ugliest part. If it's wet when u go better have 4wd and watch where u park.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mattt, post: 5720431, member: 16934"] Yup. Fish and game website usually has reports on whistle counts for quail and brood/nesting conditions etc. reports for pheasant/prairie chicken also. I mainly quail hunt but ditch chickens are about the same be prepared to spend a lot of time driving and putting eyes on habitat or lack of. Crp changes quite often and a lot of the ground that is enrolled in hunter access may have crp but no crop planted. Still awesome hunting. Give the dogs a little extra time and be patient. A lot of them have to adjust to the different environment and scent sometimes takes a day or two. Pheasant probably gonna be central to western ks. All the old bird towns are still that. Hays or hutch would be decent starting points. I really like Kansas. They did a good job of putting the interstate in the ugliest part. If it’s wet when u go better have 4wd and watch where u park. [/QUOTE]
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