NEW ON THE WING PODCAST On this week's episode of the On the Wing podcast we host a conservation roundtable with the leaders of Backcountry Hunters & Anglers, The Wildlife Society, and North American Grouse Partnership to talk about their organization’s missions, as well as their favorite bird dog breeds, Aldo Leopold quotes, and more. Click the link below or listen wherever you get your podcasts for the full episode. You won't want to miss this one! https://bit.ly/3DVZQqv The On The Wing Podcast is proudly fueled by Purina Pro Plan
Representation icon for a video post.
Looking for a Pheasants Forever chapter banquet or event near you? Click the link below to see all of the opportunities in your area. Now is a great time to get connected with like-minded bird hunters, bird dog fanatics, and conservationists. https://events.pheasantsforever.org/events #pheasantsforever #pheasants
BIRD DOGS ON THE MIND For a pheasant hunter, is there a harder time of year than those “lost” months between last season and next fall? One of your cures — PF Journal’s annual Bird Dog Issue — is in the works. Sign up or renew using the link below by April 1 to be sure you’re on the list for this year’s edition honoring our most trusted companions and helping us make the partnership stronger. Special stories, commissioned art, pictures for the ages, all starting right on our cover. Give that bird dog an extra hug tonight, thank him or her for keeping you going … and for giving us all more cause to invest in the habitat and access missions. - Tom “Carp” Carpenter, Editor. https://bit.ly/4bYQG9l Cover 📷 : Bill Buckley
2024 National Chapter Awards Pheasants Forever volunteer chapters throughout America are being honored for their mission-driven accomplishments over the past year in the categories of habitat work, membership, education and outreach, and conservation advocacy. These attributes are what propel the organization’s conservation accomplishments from year-to-year, now accounting for more than 24 million acres since 1982. Join us in celebrating these champions of upland conservation!
Representation icon for a carousel post.
Pheasant Fact Friday! Evidence of the upcoming reproductive season may be seen when the birds are still in their winter flocks. The first visible sign of sexual development is the enlarging wattles on the rooster's head. Feeling the urges of spring, the rooster is no longer content to be crowded with other roosters. In late March the rooster flocks and the hen flocks break up, and birds scatter. A rooster may move up to 10 miles from his winter area, but generally moves less than two. An adult rooster moves the least distance, while the juvenile hen the greatest. Such varied distances spread the birds into all possible nesting areas. #pheasantsforever #pheasants #pheasantfactfriday
Representation icon for a carousel post.
Load up on top shooting gear and accessories at the Pheasants Forever Store with the 2025 Spring Shooting Sale. Now through March 23, shop at the link below and take advantage of these limited-time deals before they're gone! https://bit.ly/43Ukvpi
NEW ON THE WING PODCAST On this week's episode host Bob St.Pierre is joined by Kent Adams, Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever’s Director of Conservation Delivery for the Northeast, John Kinney, PF & QF’s Indiana State Coordinator, and Will Hinshaw, PF & QF’s Indiana Regional Representative about the organization’s growth in the “Hoosier State.” The group talks about the organization’s public and private land habitat efforts in the state and public hunting access programs. Click the link below or listen wherever you get your podcasts for the full episode. https://bit.ly/4iDoYkA The On The Wing Podcast is proudly fueled by Purina Pro Plan
Representation icon for a video post.
Meet the Pheasant Hunter Pheasant hunters come in all shapes and sizes, and take all manner of approaches to their pastime and passion. Click the link below for a fun poke at some of the more colorful characters we find in the fields. See someone you recognize? Tag them below! This first ran in the 2024-25 Winter Issue of the Pheasants Forever Journal, art by Phil Juliano. https://pheasantsforever.org/meetthepheasanthunter
Representation icon for a carousel post.
With the cold winter months of January and February gone, the pheasant may breathe a sigh of relief. In fact, the birds need 34 percent less energy to survive in March than in January. This is largely due to the fact that increasing day temperatures are approaching the lower end of the bird's thermoneutral zone. Within this temperature zone, the pheasant does not need to use energy to stay warm. In January most of the bird's energy is maintenance energy as he tries to stay warm. Warmer temperatures in March and April allow more of what the bird eats to be used for production energy. #pheasantsforever #pheasants #pheasantfactfriday
Representation icon for a carousel post.
"Finn, my seven-year-old English setter, and I returned to our smalltown home in northwestern Iowa with three roosters in the bed of my truck: our first limit of the season. But only two of those birds made it to the dinner table." Head to the link below to read "The Limit that Wasn't" which originally appeared in the Winter 2025-26 Issue of Pheasants Forever Journal. https://bit.ly/3FvexRI
NEW ON THE WING PODCAST This week’s episode highlights the expansion of our Public Access to Habitat (PATH) program to a national scale. With more than 69,000 acres already open in two states, this initiative is primed to take off with the incredible support of partners like onX Hunt. Listen here or wherever you get your podcasts: https://bit.ly/3DL2PSn
Representation icon for a video post.
Spring is in the air! 🤞 for a productive nesting season across pheasant country. 🎥: Jordan Bennett
Representation icon for a video post.
468
  • «
  • ‹
  • 38
  • 39
  • 40
  • ›
  • »