
Originally Posted by
PeteRevvv
Nothing really got done in the rain for the week before non-resident opener. I covered most of east central from 212 north to Aberdeen over the opener for 4 days and I would say beans were at 1/3 of fields harvested but combines were running every day on more beans. Corn was up everywhere but for a few fields in pasture areas to the west. There was water everywhere in fields and stock dams so you couldn't really focus hunts on areas with available water as you couldn't tell how long it had held water to concentrate bird numbers. Birds were exclusively in the corn. There was isolated, long term drought areas so the shorter the corn, the less birds hatched in that area. Made for long stretches of passing up bean fields and short corn.
If there was cover near the picked beans, then the birds weren't exclusively in the corn, at least not all the time. Beans laying around on the ground are a LOT easier to eat than anything else in that situation. So at some point during the day, the birds will use the cover adjacent to picked beans. Don't overlook it. Once the corn gets picked, then they switch if possible. They usually choose corn over beans, especially once we get further into winter.
"Most pheasants in South Dakota don't react too well to #5s." -The Hunt for Red Rooster
Bookmarks