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Good day chasing NH Pheasants
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Fun day with sidekick Cody chasing New Hampshire Pheasants. No woodcock pointed to my surprise. 10 or 12 Pheasant points and my two bird limit shot. My go to bird guns. My dad’s 1912 16 Ga Flues, factory choked cyl/full 26 “ barrels and weighs 5.9 lbs. and my late 20 Ga NID choked f/m. And a tired Cody ��
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What a Happy Boy - I Love Him.
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Very nice Steve
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Looks like your buddy enjoyed the hunt. Nice going -- both of you!
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Nice choice of bird guns Steve.
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We were up in Pittsburg hiking, shooting clays, and visiting friends WE before last. Flushed some grouse and a few pheasants but no woodcocks. Snow flurries and some 20 degree mornings. Leaves long gone but pretty country around Lake Francis and the four Connecticuts.
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Wait a minute… Pheasants in Pittsburgh, NH…?? . |
Yes Dean, Pheasants in Pittsburg. There are two stocking sites in Pittsburg. They get stocked just before the October 1st opening day, and then on two more times the following two Thursdays. I was 15 miles up Indian Stream Road one October just about 5 miles from the Canadian Border when I drove up on a Cock Pheasant standing in the road. Up in that country he had enough predators wanting him so I let him walk off into the brush. I do not imagine he made it to winter:) I was on the the NH Fish and Game Commission when we voted to expand the stocking of Pheasants to Northern NH. We had received lots of complaints from residents because the had to travel south for the opportunity to hunt pheasants.
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Thanks Steve. I don't believe however, that pheasants were ever indigenous to that area of NH due to the severe climate and I'll bet those stocked birds have an extremely doubtful chance of seeing springtime. It's "put and take" hunting I believe.
PS - I love those pups in your avatar. . |
Dean all the Pheasant hunting in NH is strictly put and take. They were never a native bird. That being said I have been up to Pittsburg snowmobiling in the dead of winter and have seen a few pheasants under bird feeders.
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Indian Stream is where we were hiking, up top, along a sled trail, close, very close to the border. And later up Perry Stream, again, a sled trail. Heard about a Chinese national caught smuggling by kayak at 3 am 60 box turtles from NJ across Wallace Pond, VT. Now in detention. Hope they go away for a long, long time.
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Spent 35 years hunting and guiding in that area. Shot some nice bucks there. Tracked many bucks up to the the border and had to turn around when they crossed into Canada. Put hundreds and hundreds of miles on my sled there. The whole Connecticut Headwaters Land is in serious jeopardy of being ruined forever due to an absentee new owner of the land. Seems they want to make money by selling carbon credits and not harvesting timber, which is the life blood of our north country. This will be a huge fight between the State and them. They are violating agreements that go with the land and were negotiated 20 years ago. I was a member of the NH Fish and Game Commission and was a part of the negotiations.
[url]https://indepthnh.org/2024/10/21/4325405/[/url. |
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The carbon credits issue is serious. Our friends belong both to the ATV club and the Snowmobile and the issue came up at a meeting we attended as guests. The new absentee owner could care less about the headwaters area, only the carbon credit market. I hope it works out in the long run for area.
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Steve, I grew up in the Greenlodge section of Dedham, Mass. The Neponset meadow was at the end of our street. I could literally walk out the back door and hunt native grouse, flight woodcock and pheasants all day long. Unfortunately, when they put the developments in that ended hunting in our area. God, those were the days tho.
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Same scenario on the North Shore of Massachusetts. In the 50’s and 60’s I could literally walk out my back door and be in prime pheasant habitat with the Rebecca Nurse farm fields of corn and the brooks and marshes bordering my Dad’s blueberry bushes and apple trees. I remember flocks of as many as two dozen pheasants flushing in unison and then walking up the singles for hours. Gone but not forgotten. . |
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