Chicago Sun-Times

HUNTING, NOT BUNTING, ON OPENING DAY

- DALE BOWMAN dbowman@suntimes.com | @BowmanOuts­ide

As the pheasant hunters gathered, Jason Bleich pulled up a video of migrating monarch butterflie­s swarming goldenrod and milkweed on the family farm. “It looked like it was snowing,’’ he said. Habitat. Habitat. Habitat. It’s what makes opening day special. Upland game seasons opened Saturday in Illinois.

“What is good for the monarchs is good for the pheasants and quail,’’ Bleich said.

Bleich, a conservati­on specialist with Pheasants Forever, invited me along on the family opening-day hunt, a great honor, especially on a family farm of six generation­s in east central Illinois.

Another honor was being along as Jason’s father, Mike, took Sadie, a 10-month-old Brittany, on her first hunt.

“I think we will see pheasants today,’’ he said.

He remembers when they put in the first deliberate habitat, a shelter belt on the north end. Since then, the whole farm has been enrolled in the Conservati­on Reserve Program. Birds returned quickly.

“Early on, we only shot one or two a year,’’ Mike Bleich said.

It took us awhile to assemble as he and his brother-in-law, Jim Sorensen, organized. Sorensen’s sons, Chris and Ross, joined later. The initial group included Martin Shepherd (a southern storytelle­r) and Hanns Meyer and his son Hunter.

A nearby farmer, Keith McTaggart, stopped off and drove the 1930s John Deere with a classic putt-putt sound. Bob Watson soon arrived.

Early on, we flushed a few, but other birds flew into an area saved until the end. That hilltop was recently seeded in a mix including native flowers. That draws insects, which fed the poults this summer. Now, the birds naturally returned there.

When we pushed that out late morning, birds exploded. I was flanking when the line reached the edge of a wetlands area, and eight pheasants (seven cockbirds) flushed in a stunningly beautiful sight.

Habitat. Habitat. Habitat. That will be a major theme when the Pheasant Fest & Quail Classic comes to Illinois for the first time Feb. 22-24 at the Schaumburg Convention Center.

Mike Bleich figured we flushed 40 birds in the morning. Chris Sorensen left early to make a late breakfast of sausage omelet, homemade sausage gravy and biscuits. Venison chili heated on the side with a pan of home-baked sweet rolls.

In the afternoon, Ross Fogle, PF northern Illinois regional representa­tive, joined us, and we hunted Watson’s farm, seeded two years ago with PF’s Illinois Pollinator Plus mix. For somebody my age, used to wading through switchgras­s on CRP, it was wonderfull­y different.

The birds were already there in only a couple of years. As were deer and woodcock. We jumped two dozen pheasants. Three went into the bag to make six on the day. More important, Sadie found several downed birds, and by the day’s end pointed her first three birds, one of which I missed clean.

“Good to see the birds are back,’’ Jim Sorensen summed up midday.

The two farms we hunted were relatively new CRP projects (CP23 Wetland Restoratio­ns and CP42 Pollinator Habitat).

Habitat. Habitat. Habitat.

Deer

The rut is going across Illinois. Through Sunday, bowhunters harvested 26,530 deer, compared to 25,848 for the same period in 2017. Males made up 61 percent of the harvest last week.

Stray cast

Time for Mitch Trubisky to grow his kype.

 ?? DALE BOWMAN/FOR THE SUN-TIMES ?? Sadie and Mike Bleich huddle in the field with the second pheasant the 10-month-old Brittany ever found.
DALE BOWMAN/FOR THE SUN-TIMES Sadie and Mike Bleich huddle in the field with the second pheasant the 10-month-old Brittany ever found.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States