Last year, when a group of my college friends and I walked the fields of central South Dakota hunting for pheasants, bird count was down. Not by much, but you felt it — hens flew more frequently than roosters and the cock birds that did fly were wily and fast, lighting off on the wind with quick, successive pumps of the wings.
This year, bird count is up — by 42 percent. Pre-season, the pheasants per mile (PPM) sat at 3.80, up from 2.68 in 2014 and 1.52 in 2013. According to South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks, “The statewide PPM index is similar to 2011 when hunters harvested 1.56 million roosters.” You feel that kind of PPM — roosters loiter roadside, fly out from the fields in droves, and the boys match the girls in the sky. The only problem you’re presented with in this PPM is how fast you can reload.
Our three days of hunting culminated at The Yard — a family property in Mobridge, South Dakota, where a year-round freshwater spring , thick brush and lines of unharvested corn create something of a pheasant haven (water, cover and feed). Typically, this is saved for just family, a Thanksgiving event that’s more shootout than hunt. This year, given the number of birds, an early invitation was extended.
Hunting The Yard with this PPM on an unseasonal hot day (15 to 25 degrees warmer than average mid-November temperatures) created one of the more effortless harvests in memory. After placing a group of 10 guns around the property, the dogs went in and the birds went up. Wave after wave of roosters and hens cleared the land, some slipping out between cracks, some dodging the shot, some falling in the harvest. We limited in less than a half hour. It didn’t take walking fields for miles. It didn’t take surviving the harsh cold and severe winds of the north plains. It didn’t try the patience waiting for a rooster to fly. But it did, in every smile and story shared, ensure that next year, this group will be back again.
As is tradition, I took a few pieces of gear to South Dakota for a test. In this year’s selection I focused on a few recently released key accessories — bags, boots, gloves and a knife. These four items are essentials for improving the quality of a hunt, and a small investment goes a long way in the field.
Quality Goods for a Hunt
Harvesting the Upland Bird Population in Style