For my 40th birthday, in December, I asked my wife, Virginia, for something special. I wanted her to take advantage of the hunter-education classes that had moved online due to the pandemic听to obtain her first hunting license听so she could听join me in the field.听
Hunting is a passion of mine. It鈥檚 fun,听it puts听healthy听meat on our table, and I enjoy the challenge and tradition. But most of all, I love wild animals, and participating in the sport is the most meaningful way to save them.听
Because individual hunters contribute significantly to conservation, the most powerful thing any of us can do for the cause is听recruit additional hunters. And the most听effective way you can instill future commitment from a first-timer is to ensure that their first hunt is a success.听But my birthday falls on December 15鈥攚ell after the end of听general hunting seasons. And since we weren鈥檛 yet vaccinated, I needed to find a hunt with plenty of animals and opportunities, yet听one that was safe听and responsible for us to participate in.听
A friend recommended听, a ranch in Seneca, South Dakota,听650 miles away from our home in Bozeman, Montana. Due to the pandemic, we opted to drive, and the owner assured me his property was听following Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines. Plus,听there听had been so many cancellations over the past season that听the preserve鈥檚 pen-raised birds were still plentiful. More importantly, R&R is a prime example of the successful partnership between private landowners, taxpayers, hunters, and nonprofit organizations that uses pheasant hunting to restore wildlife habitat across the country. Not only would Virginia and I have ample opportunities to find the birds, but it would be a perfect chance for her to听get her hands dirty in the pursuit of wildlife conservation.
Where Are Pheasants From?
Pheasants are native to China听but were introduced to Europe by the Romans. It鈥檚 thought that pheasants may have arrived in England , where they decorated the gardens of the wealthy. The advent of firearms听and听the economic means for leisure time popularized bird hunting in England during the 1700s, so听gamekeepers began breeding the birds. Today, bird hunting in England is synonymous with the pheasant, and听around of them are released there each year.听
Americans who hunted pheasants in the United Kingdom sought to . But it wasn鈥檛 until the American consul general in Shanghai, Owen Denny, shipped 38 pheasants to his brother鈥檚 farm in Oregon鈥檚 Willamette Valley in 1881 that the breeding of pheasants听began in America. Ten years later, on the opening day of America鈥檚 first-ever pheasant season, hunters shot 50,000 birds. That success prompted would-be pheasant hunters to introduce them听across much of the rest of the country.听
A prey species, pheasants try to stick to cover听and will run away from threats through that cover听unless startled. When they can be convinced to take off, they fly at speeds of up to 60 miles per hour. The challenge those speeds represent explain the popularity of pheasant hunting.听
Pheasants, which are about the size and shape of a chicken,听eat insects听and seeds听and live in mixed habitats like brushy meadows, hedgerows, marshes, and areas where woods听and fields meet. In other words, they prefer places that look like much of the agricultural Midwest. The first pheasants were introduced to South Dakota in 1908, and by 1936, the state had an estimated听population of 12 million of them.听
One of the reasons for the bird鈥檚 success is that , even in seasons where the take exceeds one听million birds in a single state. In fact, hunters could harvest as much as 93 percent of pre-hunt roosters听without hurting the population as a whole,听according to听, a nonprofit dedicated to conserving听wildlife habitat.听
That鈥檚 because hunters only听shoot roosters, not hens鈥攊n flight, it鈥檚 easy to distinguish the brightly colored, long-tailed roosters from the drab, short-tailed females鈥攁nd each male impregnates an entire harem of females before hunting season begins. In turn, each of those hens lays seven to fifteen听eggs.
Even without hunting, pheasants don鈥檛 live long. Predators like foxes, raccoons, skunks, feral cats, hawks, and owls all feed on them. But听the biggest source of pheasant mortality isn鈥檛 humans or natural predators, it鈥檚 simply winter weather. According to Pheasants Forever, with mild weather and good habitat, winter survival rates can be as high as 95 percent. In a worst-case scenario, with severe weather and poor habitat, survival rates can fall to 20 percent.听
Which brings us to听why shooting an introduced, pen-raised, non-native species helps save American wildlife.听

Farming and Habitat
Farming is a fickle, challenging business that is often听highly dependent on听weather, so farmers are incentivized to maximize profits in good years by chasing the highest yields per acre of land possible.听In 2019, a crop like corn could, in a best-case scenario on a high-yield farm, be expected to pay听$738 per acre, with an additional $80 per acre听added by federal aid programs, for a total possible revenue of . Farmers can鈥檛 add growing seasons, and the price of their crops is out of their control. So the best way for farmers to increase revenue is to plant as much of their lands with a听crop that produces the highest yields.听
That鈥檚 what鈥檚 led to modern, monolithic farming practices, where entire regions are turned over to a single crop. If corn grows best in a given region, then to maximize revenue, every inch of every听acre of every farm in that region鈥攁nd in a place like Seneca, South Dakota, nearly every acre is a farm acre鈥攏eeds to be planted with corn. Factors like interest rates, commodities prices, and trade policies make the picture I鈥檓 painting here much more complicated in the real world, but you get the idea: generally speaking, what鈥檚 good for farming听is bad for wildlife.听
Turning every square inch of land over to a single crop decimated wildlife habitat across the Midwest. And wildlife, including the pheasant, began to disappear. From a high of 16 million birds in 1945, South Dakota鈥檚 pheasant population fell to a low of in 1976. And with the pheasant, other wildlife disappeared, too. The population of deer in the state fell from in the 1930s to around 200,000 in the 1980s.听
It also turns out that factors outside a farmer鈥檚 control鈥攖hose pesky interest rates and commodities prices鈥攃an swing fortunes against them, especially when they鈥檙e invested so heavily in producing a single one of those commodities. That鈥檚 what led to of the 1980s, which for a time threatened the future of independent farming in this country.听
One of the ways the Reagan administration tackled the听crisis was with something called the 听(CRP). First authorized by the Food Security Act of 1985, it uses taxpayer dollars to pay farmers not to farm certain parts of their land, attempting to address problems like wildlife habitat, erosion, and even surplus commodity stocks in one fell swoop.听
Today听the CRP program protects . Rates vary听from $10 to $300 per acre, depending on the location and ecological importance of that acre, with the average payment coming in at .听That鈥檚 been enough to convince a lot of farmers not to develop marginal croplands, but it only amounts to about 10 percent of the per-acre revenue that鈥檚 possible with high-yield practices.听
The CRP budgets have also become a political football over the years. As farmland slowly returned to natural habitat after听1985, pheasant numbers slowly rebounded. By 2007, the CRP program covered 1.5 million acres of land in South Dakota, and the wild-pheasant population reached . As CRP rates fell, though,听some farmers were forced to start farming land formerly protected under the program. In 2019, only were enrolled in the CRP program, and pheasant numbers in the state fell to听7.7 million wild birds.听

On the Ground
鈥淐RP doesn鈥檛 pay for trees,鈥 says Sal Roseland, who started converting his multigenerational听family farm听into a pheasant preserve in 2002. R&R, the South Dakota ranch that Virginia and I visited in听December,听is now one of the most successful operations in the state. Roseland听guided us on a two-day hunt across his 18,000-acre property.听
Pointing out the various features that make up good pheasant habitat, he explained that while pheasants nest in dense grass and crops,听and use places like cattail sloughs for cover, much of that can become inaccessible to the birds in winter听if the land听gets blanketed and flattened by heavy snowfall. In addition to reduced CRP acreage, several severe winters since 2007 have contributed to the decline in South Dakota pheasant populations.听
The Roselands run cattle, which eat grass and grain. To develop good pheasant habitat, Roseland听converted much of his ranch into wild grassland (that the cows are kept off of), left tree belts intact and听marshes undrained, and planted crops like , which is one of the grains found in commercial birdseed. Not only does that provide a high-energy food source for the birds, but milo鈥檚 thick, corn-like stalks are able to stand up to heavier weather than grass alone can, making it valuable cover听for pheasants听and other wild animals.听
Walking the R&R ranch, it鈥檚 rare not to see a hawk, an eagle, or an owl flying somewhere in your field of vision. Head into heavier cover, and Roseland鈥檚 dogs kick up nearly as many deer as they do birds. The marshland is dotted by muskrat nests. This听natural ideal stands in contrast to most other farmland on the Great Plains, where rows of crops stretch from one horizon to the other, choking out any other form of life.听
The Roselands care about wildlife, but what enabled听them to create this haven听wasn鈥檛 just good intentions, it was听good income. A two-day hunt at the ranch costs $1,500 per hunter, and Roseland听says that he and his wife, Kelly, host about 800 hunters a season. On top of the CRP payments, that amounts to听an additional $66 per听acre, which is still not enough to offset the money that could be made from just plowing everything under.听
Fortunately, additional help is available. Seeds for Roseland鈥檚 milo are donated by a local supplier, who works with . Since 1982, that organization has created or enhanced 15.8 million acres of wildlife habitat across North America. Made up of local chapters, the organization funds thousands of annual projects, each responding听uniquely to local听needs. On Roseland鈥檚 ranch, that might mean milo seeds; elsewhere, it might be the outright acquisition of property听for the purpose of rehabilitation听and public access. Pheasants Forever has worked with public-land-management agencies to set aside 187,000 acres of protected land for public access, and 138,000 people听pay annual membership fees in the organization that start at $35 per year. of those members are hunters. Because good pheasant habitat is a healthy, natural ecosystem, Pheasants Forever has听also invested in programs like 听and across the Midwest, a crucial听monarch-butterfly migration region.听
None of that money would exist if there weren鈥檛 birds to shoot.
Wild Versus听Raised Birds
Every pheasant on this continent is a result of human introduction. The initial push in the late 19th and early 20th centuries resulted in populations that now propagate in the wild. But听as the numbers of those听birds collapsed in the 1960s and 1970s, state governments sought to sustain hunting activity, and听notably听the economic boon it听brings to wildlife conservation, by raising and releasing large quantities of pheasants听before each hunting season.听
Those early programs fostered hunting opportunities, but raising birds in covered pens where they were safe from predation听and fattened up听on easy, rich food sources didn鈥檛 exactly produce good fliers. Hunters dubbed the penned birds 鈥渄itch chickens,鈥 and complained they听just weren鈥檛 any fun to chase.听
That changed in the 1980s, when private breeders began experimenting by听crossbreeding different varieties of pheasants and improving the conditions in which they were raised. One of the largest pheasant breeders, Bill MacFarlane, calls his birds听鈥溾 and says they鈥檙e听鈥渇ull of pep and a sense of urgency.鈥
What Roseland鈥檚 customers pay for when they visit R&R is opportunity. While听finding a pheasant on public land can take a considerable amount of听hiking and involves no sure outcomes听(not to mention a daily limit of three birds if you are lucky),听hunters walking Roseland鈥檚 ranch will have plenty of chances to take a shot听and no limit on the number of birds they can bag.听
That is a perfect formula for a successful first hunt. When Virginia and I visited R&R in December, temperatures were hovering in the single digits, and high winds combined with light precipitation to blow ice crystals at our exposed faces. That late in the year, the remaining birds were the wariest ones, flying away well outside of shooting distances. Working with Roseland, we eventually developed a strategy: Virginia and I would walk far ahead听of Roseland and his dogs, hopefully surprising the birds into flight as they ran away from the dogs听and into us. 听That worked. We drove home after the second day with 30 birds in our cooler鈥攎ore than enough to keep making meals of听them three months later.听
Is that too easy? ,听and there are more folks hunting听on public land听in South Dakota than听on private land. But听across the state, there are a couple hundred other preserves. And听just like Roseland鈥檚, those preserves are providing wild habitat on private land, while the hunters on them are helping听pay for conservation on the state鈥檚 public land. 听in South Dakota, hunters on private land听shot 283,254 birds, while 828,700 pheasants were shot on public land.听
Three Billion Birds Gone
Are pheasants invasive? that they create competition for native species, but they do fill a valuable role in our ecosystems as a prey species. More importantly, the money they bring in from hunters is being used to fight widespread habitat loss.听In the past 50 years, 25 percent of America鈥檚 native birds have disappeared. Since 2009, some 53 million acres of native grasslands鈥攅quivalent to the size of Kansas鈥攈ave vanished from the Great Plains.听
In response, Pheasants Forever has kicked off to create nine听million acres of new wildlife habitat across the country听and to acquire 75,000 acres for permanent protection and public access. How? The organization is trying to create 1.5 million new hunters.
One of those new hunters is my wife. Before visiting the Roselands鈥 ranch, Virginia was squeamish about the idea of shooting an animal, and nervous that her experience at gun ranges wouldn鈥檛 translate to safety in the field. But after just two days chasing birds, she鈥檚 hooked. We鈥檙e already making plans to hunt public-land birds here in Montana together this fall, and are hoping we can make the trip to R&R an annual birthday tradition. And all the additional license fees, hunting-equipment sales, organization memberships, and private-land revenues Virginia will generate across her lifetime will fund habitat restoration and protection, as well as听help protect the avian species that live across our country. Not bad for one birthday.听