Thread: Green Kansas
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Green Kansas
Unread 08-27-2013, 09:26 AM   #1
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Bruce Day
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Default Green Kansas

Two years of hard drought, two years of high heat and little rainfall. Cattle herds sold off because couldn't afford to feed them, crops withered in the fields, low yields, poor pheasant hatches. Now rain, blessed rain, and August green fields. Irrigated corn at 6-7 ft tall, even non irrigated corn is 5 ft in SW Kansas.

Pheasants have raised two broods this year. It will be a multi year return, but maybe things are looking up.

So here are some photos. First is some broken country by a cornfield, good pheasant habitat. The Comanches used to pass by this way. There was a Kiowa village a few miles south where there was permanent water before Colorado farmers dammed the river and took it all. The Kiowas lived there into the 1880's before they were forcibly moved to reservations.

Then by the tracks. This was by the northern, or summer home of the Pawnee, in Pawnee County, not far from Pawnee Rock. They summered here then traveled south into Texas for the winter.

These southern plains were once covered by buffalo as far as a person could see. Buffalo, elk, plains wolves and even the giant plains grizzly bear, big enough to take down a buffalo. Wild horses. There were few trees, there are more now than there ever were.

So, for the pheasant hunter, we have habitat, food, water, a good hatch, we just need to hunt sparingly and take care of these wild birds, pheasant , quail and prairie chickens for the treasures that they are.
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