hogpatrol
Gold $$ Contributor
Finances force closure of two pheasant farms.
http://www.media.pa.gov/Pages/Game-Commission-Details.aspx?newsid=92
http://www.media.pa.gov/Pages/Game-Commission-Details.aspx?newsid=92
Yep. 1960's - early '70's was the heyday for ringnecks in NE PA. When small farms turned into agri-business and land owners eliminated fence rows to yield maximum crops......the pheasant population took a dive. FWIW, they were never native to the US anyway.Back in the 1960's I literally lived for the first day of pheasant and small game season. Just east of Pittsburgh there were hundreds of locations for pheasant hunting and lot of birds, many provided by the Game Commission. What a great experience lost.
The loss, in my opinion, was caused by population issues. By the 1990's most all of those areas were devoid of pheasants and full of housing and urban sprawl. I stopped hunting pheasant by 1990 and moved south in 1999. Kind of surprised the game farms were still in operation. That one in Armstrong Co. was most prominent as a supplier for the areas I hunted.
Staring at a wall picture with me and two pheasants. Memories never to return and not to be made by many others in Pa. today.
Thanks for the update.
last I heard Pa went from over 1 Million hunters to 500,000!
while they run around in new vehicles, buy land and timber, build fences to keep deer out of the cuts.
I also heard when they do timber, the price has to include the fence so it shows lower income?
yeah, they're falling apart!
Probably why they have not had a license increase in decades. Lack of $ to pay WCO salaries forcing wardens to monitor multiple counties.....I don't see where they are rolling in the dough.Don't forget to and the income from strip mining, selling the top soil and natural gas wells.
