On December 3, Don Hansen and I went on a Kansas quail hunt near Emporia, Kansas. I’ve only known Don a couple of years. I had an L.C. Smith 16 gauge double that needed some work and after asking some friends, Don was highly recommended. Since then he has worked on a Browning over and under and an AYA double for me. We have become friends and I value his advice on guns and shooting as well as his friendship.
Don has hunted in this area over the years and after comparing notes we found that a lot of the properties we hunted were the same. That speaks well of the Kansas walk-in hunting and the ability of quail to withstand the pressure of all that nature throws at them as well as being hunted.
At the first farm, Don turned out his pointer, Kate and I used Luke and Blaze. We circled a harvested soy bean field, down a hedge row then through a brushy creek area and into another soy bean field on the other side. Don’s pointer was on point standing in the edge of the bean field looking into a hedge row. Blaze backed. Don went around to the other side of the hedge row and I went in front of Kate. Nothing flushed.
We moved on to the south through a brushy area. My phone rang just as we were coming out of the brushy area into some CRP. When I answered it a quail flushed at my feet. There I stood with my phone in one hand and my gun in the other. I carry my phone because I hunt alone most of the time and if I have a problem I can call for help. As we stood there discussing this with all 3 dogs off to our right quail started getting up on our left in twos and threes. These quail were 40 to 50 yards from the dogs or us. We think this was the birds that Kate had pointed. They evidently, ran out and flushed without anyone seeing or hearing them.
As we worked our way through the CRP in the direction that the birds had flown, we would occasionally see a bird in the air. Most of the time no dog or person was even close. We worked our way through the CRP in the direction of the truck. Kate again went on point with Blaze backing. When we went in to flush the bird had run about 25 yards ahead then flushed. Don shot but as fast as wild quail are it was probably out of range.
We started in earnest for the truck. As we walked along I checked my Garmin GPS and it showed Luke on point 75 yards to the south. When we finally located him in the CRP, Blaze and Kate honored. We walked in and a single flushed and I knocked it down. Blaze ran out, picked it up and delivered it to hand.
Blaze on point
We let the dogs work the area and it was not long before Luke was on point again and again Blaze and Kate backed. When Don and I walked in the bird got up and circled behind Don then behind me. I was between Don and the quail and I made a lucky shot and it dropped. The dogs didn’t see it fall so we got all three in to hunt dead. Finally Blaze pointed, then moved in to pick the bird up. I was right beside her so she dropped it in my hand.
The next farm we hunted had had the milo harvested since I had been there. Earlier I had found 2 coveys of quail here and now with the milo harvested I was expecting to find more. Out of the two coveys I had only killed 2 birds so I wasn’t really hurting them.
I turned Lucky and Whitey loose and Don put Kate out again. We went south down a creek that had quite a bit of brush and trees growing in it. Farther down it went into a waterway that was 100 yards wide in places. The grass hadn’t been mowed this year so it was real tall. We hunted through the grass to a hedge row on the west side. The hedge row ran north then turned back to the east. We had just turned east when my phone rang again. When I answered a turkey flushed about ten yards away. In the fall, in Kansas, you can hunt turkeys with dogs. With my phone in one hand and my gun in the other all I could do was yell, “shoot, shoot.”
I was between Don and the turkey. By the time he moved around me the turkey was too far. This phone thing might be a pattern. If I could get more people to call me I might see more birds.
We hunted through some CRP, hedge rows and along a creek without seeing any quail. Lucky got lost from us. I’m glad I had the GPS on him. When I went looking for him the GPS said he was 799 yards away. Sometimes when you call your dog your voice echoes and they don’t know which direction to go. So I started walking. As I got closer I could tell by the GPS that he was running back and forth in one area trying to figure out where I was. Finally when I got within about 200 yards he started towards me. We both were happy to find each other. Without the GPS that could have been much worse.
The third farm we hunted was mainly pasture that had not been grazed very much. There was some clumps of trees and a few plum thickets. As we made a big circle through this we saw some quail roosts but we didn’t find any birds. When we got back close to the truck I checked the GPS and it showed Luke on point about 200 yards away. He had went past the truck, crossed a road into some CRP that we were not going to hunt although it was in the walk-in program.
When I came past the truck, I was tired and I really wanted to drive that 200 yards to where Luke was on point but I didn’t. We got within about 35 yards of Luke and we saw the birds in the air. I asked Don if he thought Luke flushed them and he said “no. If he had of flushed them he would have been chasing them when they flew.” We had seen Luke shortly after seeing the birds and he was not excited, he was trailing trying to figure out where the birds went.
We crossed the road again looking for the singles. The dogs checked the available cover real well and finally Kate pointed in some real thick brush. When the bird flushed I was behind Don and had a good view of the action. Just before he caught up with the bird his gun barrel hit a tree. By the time he got his gun past the tree the bird was behind some more brush.
We had walked a long way, saw 2 coveys of quail and a turkey. Had only killed 2 quail but we had quite a bit of dog work. Only 3 quail actually held for the dogs point all day. The only explanation I can come up with is that a storm was supposed to hit that night and the quail weren’t holding because of the changing weather conditions. But that is the way it is nowadays on a Kansas quail hunt.
I really think quail are wilder and stronger than ever before. I am 80 and have been hunting quail for 53 years. During the good years my average yearly harvest was 250. It was not unusual to find 8 to 10 coveys per day. I am sure they were not as fast and they could be found where you saw them go down. Now they run for several hundred yards and fly again. I think the running and flying has made them faster when they do fly. I guess that is why they have survived all these years. This year I lost my shooting eye and now have to learn how to shoot with the only eye I have left. At least I will have a good excuse for missing.