quail numbers dwindling
#1
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: central Indiana
Posts: 57
quail numbers dwindling
I have hunted quail in my home state of IN and also in Illinois and the numbers have been pathetic. Places that used to produce several coveys now produce maybe one or they are just gone all together. I love a good quail hunt and was just wondering where the guys who are still having good hunts are hunting. DONt worry I'm not trying to hunt in anybody else's areas I just want to know what states are doing well.
#2
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Bowling Green, KY
Posts: 295
RE: quail numbers dwindling
Hey Neighbor. Not much better down here in KY but some spots this year seem to be producing a few more birds than last. I hear Texas is way up this year...comparing it to boom times of yesteryear. And UplandChessies I think is planning an AZ trip. I have a step-bro in AZ who doesn't hunt but says he sees quail everywhere he goes. Says their just out walking around the roadsides. I found some decent coveys 20+ birds in NE last month and have read some good posts about KS as well. HEY will you plz send some ducks down to KY. Thanks in Advance for your co-operation
#3
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Elsmere, Kentucky USA
Posts: 154
RE: quail numbers dwindling
I would think the southern part of either state would produce birds. I know a buddy of mine (Kentucky resident) who hunts geese in Indiana, begs me to go over there. Says he see and hears quail all the time.
#4
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: central Indiana
Posts: 57
RE: quail numbers dwindling
Yeah all we need to do is call up good ole' W and get him to let us quail hunt on his ranch. As far as ducks go, sorry but they haven't even got to us yet. It's the middle of Dec and its still highs in the 50's here. Freak winter and its killing our duck numbers here.
#6
Join Date: Nov 2004
Location:
Posts: 15
RE: quail numbers dwindling
We inadvertantly bumped three coveys on the first day of pheasant season in Kansas last month, but we were hunting in the western zone. Why does that matter? 'Cause you can't hunt quail in the western portion of the state until the second weekend of upland bird season. And let me tell you, it's hard to supress the instinct to pull the trigger when you step into a covey of Bobs in November. But you're right. Compared to 15-20 years ago, bobwhite numbers seem way down.
Kansas Parks and Wildlife says the quail numbers should be "slightly improved" over last year in my old hunting ground (southcentral Kansas) due to wet weather limiting the extend of pasture burning (and cover killing) during the spring. I've talked to a few friends back home who say the quail numbers are about what they were last year (in other words, none of them have taken their daily limit yet).
Since moving down here to Texas a few years ago, most of my bird hunting is done amid mesquite trees and switchgrass. Texas Parks and Wildlife released their quail forecast earlier this fall and are pretty optimistic about the bird numbers, especially in the South Texas Plains:
"It is the exception, not the rule, to have cool-wet spring and summer weather conditions in this semi-arid region of the state. It is extremely rare to have two consecutive years of such weather. But that is exactly what has happened in south Texas. In what can only be described as the proper alignment of the stars, this upcoming bobwhite season will likely be the best seen in over a decade."
In the Rolling Plains region of the state where I primarily hunt (which didn't get as much rain as the guys down south), TPWD says I should expect an "above average" season. I haven't hunted south Texas in several years (due to distance and cost), but I'm giving serious consideration to changing that this year.
Kansas Parks and Wildlife says the quail numbers should be "slightly improved" over last year in my old hunting ground (southcentral Kansas) due to wet weather limiting the extend of pasture burning (and cover killing) during the spring. I've talked to a few friends back home who say the quail numbers are about what they were last year (in other words, none of them have taken their daily limit yet).
Since moving down here to Texas a few years ago, most of my bird hunting is done amid mesquite trees and switchgrass. Texas Parks and Wildlife released their quail forecast earlier this fall and are pretty optimistic about the bird numbers, especially in the South Texas Plains:
"It is the exception, not the rule, to have cool-wet spring and summer weather conditions in this semi-arid region of the state. It is extremely rare to have two consecutive years of such weather. But that is exactly what has happened in south Texas. In what can only be described as the proper alignment of the stars, this upcoming bobwhite season will likely be the best seen in over a decade."
In the Rolling Plains region of the state where I primarily hunt (which didn't get as much rain as the guys down south), TPWD says I should expect an "above average" season. I haven't hunted south Texas in several years (due to distance and cost), but I'm giving serious consideration to changing that this year.
#9
RE: quail numbers dwindling
I know what you're going through. My oldest dog just turned 9 and during his first 2-3 years I had some fabulous quail spots on my Grandparents' farm. I never over hunted the covey's (never took more than 3-4 birds out of each covery) and each covey was at least 18 birds. One tree line that was about 800 yards long that zig-zagged contained 2 coveys of at least 20 birds and another with about 15 (no joke...got into all 3 on the same hunt a few times). Anyways, we got into a slump where we could not find many, if any wild birds on their place and we were the only ones that quail hunt out there. Last year (New Year's Day 2004) was the first time I had gotten into a covey out there in 2 years! Shot one bird and quit b/c I did not want to take anymore. Got into 1 other covey this year but for the most part I've been trying to stay away in hopes of building up the pop. again. I've mostly been hunting on controlled DNR hunts and preserves (which good ones are far and few between anymore).