Raising Pheasants

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  • Опубликовано: 25 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 106

  • @naomidaum8277
    @naomidaum8277 Год назад +31

    The blinders: It's like a nose ring that clips onto the beak, and the blinders prevent them from seeing well. Without the blinders, the males would fight for dominance, territory, breeding rights, you name it. It keeps them fairly peaceful. They can eat, drink, and see everything except for what's right in front of them, thus preventing fighting and bickering. A brilliant invention.

    • @Sharkdog11b
      @Sharkdog11b Год назад +1

      I was just about to ask this thank you

    • @saltycat662
      @saltycat662 6 месяцев назад

      True but I think those things pinch like hell. It's likely painful and uncomfortable for them. Ever put clothing pins on the tips of your fingertips? It hurts.

    • @Ceci-kj9ce
      @Ceci-kj9ce 2 месяца назад +1

      The hens need the blinders too?

  • @federicogiron7777
    @federicogiron7777 Год назад +1

    Thank you for sharing your video on rising pheasants..

  • @rossthomas945
    @rossthomas945 Год назад +3

    Absolutely beautiful birds.

  • @HealingTimeTV
    @HealingTimeTV Год назад +1

    Ringneck pheasant chicks의 성장과정을 영상으로 소개하여주셔서감사해요, Thank you for introducing the growth process of Ringneck pheasant chicks through video. so Cute 🐣🐤"The blinders" good invention

  • @HiddenBlessingsHomestead
    @HiddenBlessingsHomestead 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this video, it was neat seeing things from start to finish. My son is wanting to raise some and I knew very little about them, now I feel like I know more. I will be looking for some of your other videos with them.

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  9 месяцев назад

      Glad you found it interesting and informative! I started raising pheasants in 2020 and it has definitely become one of my passions!

    • @gavinblaedow9255
      @gavinblaedow9255 9 месяцев назад

      The son here. Just watched this and it’s definitely informative. I like your cage design with the steel roofing around the bottom I can see that helping with predators that could tear at the mesh near the ground.

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  9 месяцев назад +1

      @@gavinblaedow9255I plan to create a video this spring discussing the design of the pheasant pen. It’s been predator proof for 3+ years. We’ve had multiple pictures of raccoons, cats, mink, foxes, and coyotes on the outside of the pen that were unable to get in.

  • @kennethstensrud669
    @kennethstensrud669 Год назад +9

    Next time you're going to catch them from the brooder, take out all loose things like waterers and feeders, and then corner them with a cardboard panel. Much easier to catch them then. And they need more cover than you did provide at the early stage, more for them to hide in makes them called.

  • @anthonyresto8596
    @anthonyresto8596 Год назад +1

    A pro at catching chics!😁👍

  • @jimmiemeeks9795
    @jimmiemeeks9795 Год назад

    Thank u for sharing very interesting

  • @1ntwndrboy198
    @1ntwndrboy198 Год назад

    Nice to see someone with the same last name 👍

  • @Ieatpaste23
    @Ieatpaste23 Год назад

    Thanks for this. Bought 30 and needed a little advice. Only keeping 3.

    • @d-lo3
      @d-lo3 5 месяцев назад

      Why only keep three? Did the others die off??

    • @Ieatpaste23
      @Ieatpaste23 5 месяцев назад

      @d-lo3 nah, only have room for 3. 4 died. I'm keeping 2 hens and a rooster. They fight if you keep too many adults.

  • @serresaschrock2359
    @serresaschrock2359 Год назад

    My family favorite is mountain pride and giant oxheart

  • @tadcoder2848
    @tadcoder2848 Год назад +6

    Dude get a poultry hook. Catch'em in a flash.

  • @haroldcrook4055
    @haroldcrook4055 Год назад

    Thanks for the view.

  • @RagamTopik
    @RagamTopik Год назад

    Saya Suka Ayam hias. I love you. From Indonesian.

  • @uwedirksen5946
    @uwedirksen5946 Год назад

    Well Don good job 👍🇩🇰

  • @jurodiko2388
    @jurodiko2388 День назад

    Where can i buy the blinders?

  • @benjamindover7399
    @benjamindover7399 Год назад +5

    Chicken wire is great for keeping chickens IN but it's not so good at keeping predators OUT. I found that welded wire mesh is not much more expensive and it keeps out the foxes.

    • @EponasArchangel
      @EponasArchangel 3 месяца назад

      You could also overlap the chicken wire panels and bury the bottom a foot or two into the ground so nothing can dig underneath. My grandparents did this with the fences around their chicken coop and garden, both were occupied by chickens and the geese and ducks they got later and nothing got in or out of there unless someone opened the gate.

  • @montana4939
    @montana4939 Год назад

    Good job !

  • @indyreno2933
    @indyreno2933 Год назад +1

    The Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus) is a species of gamebird native to Asia, it is the largest of the four extant species of common pheasant, which is any constituting the genus Phasianus, in addition to being the only of the thirty-two extant pheasant species that has been introduced to many parts of the world, there are eighteen recognized subspecies within five subspecies groups: the Phasianus torquatus sohokhotensis group that contains the Strauch's Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus strauchi), the Sohokhoto Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus sohokhotensis), and the Alashan Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus alaschanicus), the Phasianus torquatus torquatus group that contains the Tonkinese Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus takatsukasae), the Shandong Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus shandongensis), the Sichuan Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus torquatus), the Hainan Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus hainanus), and the Formosan Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus formosanus), the Phasianus torquatus karpowi group that contains the Shansi Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus kiangsuensis), the Mandarin Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus liaoningensis), the Manchurian Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus pallasi), and the Korean Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus karpowi), the Phasianus torquatus hagenbecki group that contains the Kobdo Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus hagenbecki) and the Ruo Shui Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus edzinensis), and the Phasianus torquatus mongolicus group that contains the Mongolian Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus mongolicus), the Zerafshan Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus zerafschanicus), the Syr-Darya Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus turcestanicus), and the Aral Ring-Necked Pheasant (Phasianus torquatus bergii).

  • @michaelkamradt4700
    @michaelkamradt4700 Год назад +1

    Feeding them hamburger occasionally will greatly lesson the problem of cannibalism. After doing that I never again had an issue.

  • @gregorysagegreene
    @gregorysagegreene Год назад

    Interesting, thank you.

  • @rambothapa5578
    @rambothapa5578 2 месяца назад

    how can we stop bitting backyard each other

  • @alirezanegari-yx8wi
    @alirezanegari-yx8wi Год назад

    So nice❤

  • @UyenHara
    @UyenHara 4 месяца назад

    They can eat, drink, and see everything except for what's right in front of them, thus preventing fighting and bickering

  • @DonGladwin
    @DonGladwin 10 месяцев назад +1

    I have raised them escape artist.

  • @marcusaetius9309
    @marcusaetius9309 Год назад +1

    Oh, I’m a bit disappointed, I thought this was going to be about raising peasants…😂
    Just kidding, interesting stuff👍🏻

  • @Matt-du9ez
    @Matt-du9ez Год назад +2

    ive been considering getting pheasants but after witnessing how flighty they can be i might have to reconsider... super nice birds though.

    • @Ieatpaste23
      @Ieatpaste23 Год назад

      You might try other species. ring necks are raised to be as wild as possible. They are used for hunting. Goldens and such are decorative and more mellow.

    • @Michaelxxy
      @Michaelxxy 7 месяцев назад

      Thank you guys. Nice to see from chick to adult.

  • @luzgarcia9499
    @luzgarcia9499 Год назад

    What happened to
    The rest

  • @chevyheavy79
    @chevyheavy79 Год назад +1

    If i were to go buy some what the earliest i can let them go on my property?

    • @raprock5000
      @raprock5000 8 месяцев назад +1

      I'd recommend 8 weeks. I've been releasing some every year for 20 years.

    • @raprock5000
      @raprock5000 8 месяцев назад +1

      Or if you have good nesting cover you can buy adult bred hens to release in the spring. Less work involved but hens may cost $12-15 each.

  • @ToschiReelLifeMedia
    @ToschiReelLifeMedia Год назад

    How many birds did you lose?

  • @derekrogers5858
    @derekrogers5858 6 месяцев назад

    Where do you get all that driftwood?

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  6 месяцев назад

      There’s a lot of natural driftwood around our backyard. Especially on the property and tree lines that divide all of the agriculture fields in the country.

  • @klt2563
    @klt2563 9 месяцев назад

    What size pen as newborns and what size coop/run for older

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  9 месяцев назад

      Once the chicks outgrow the box and have feathers, we put them into the pen. This usually happens around 3 weeks old. Our pen is 10 feet x 30 feet. The adult pheasants require about 10 square feet per bird to live comfortably but we add structure to our pen to give them perching areas. This helps us add a few more pheasants to the pen.

  • @garymanuel4710
    @garymanuel4710 Год назад +6

    Very interesting, i have been thinking of getting a few Pheasant eggs & hatching them releasing them in the wild, seeing there are none in the province of newfoundland, a guy in my area released i think it was only 4 or 5 but i think they were to young when he released them, they could fly only few feet & was caught by predators, But for a couple of yrs after there was 1 hen that used to be spotted, & to be honest maybe they were all hens that was released, But i think if they were kept until they could fly & old enough to know the rooster from the hen & let them go in different areas, maybe 3 hens to 1 rooster they could surive to breed

    • @robertfaucher3750
      @robertfaucher3750 Год назад +1

      I wouldn't recommend doing that could be bad for the environment to release

    • @marlaseegerstein3158
      @marlaseegerstein3158 Год назад

      That's illegal

    • @garymanuel4710
      @garymanuel4710 Год назад +2

      @@marlaseegerstein3158 that is what makes it exciting, it"s illegal to shit in the woods too but i love doing that too, i might be looked at has a animal, But i am no sheep

    • @HiddenBlessingsHomestead
      @HiddenBlessingsHomestead 10 месяцев назад

      @@marlaseegerstein3158 I believe if you have a small game hunting license it is perfectly legal.

    • @29erallday
      @29erallday 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@robertfaucher3750they are the environment dumbass

  • @luissalazar7183
    @luissalazar7183 Год назад +1

    My question is why u put those red things on there mouth

    • @stingingmetal9648
      @stingingmetal9648 Год назад +1

      To stop them from pecking.

    • @naomidaum8277
      @naomidaum8277 Год назад

      It's like a nose ring that clips onto the beak, and the blinders prevent them from seeing well. Without the blinders, the males would fight for dominance, territory, breeding rights, you name it. It keeps them fairly peaceful. They can eat, drink, and see everything except for what's right in front of them, thus preventing fighting and bickering.

    • @raprock5000
      @raprock5000 8 месяцев назад

      From being in a pen they pull feathers off each other, and will even cannibalize ..the blinders help them feather out nicely with full tail feathers..

  • @tther3873
    @tther3873 Год назад

    Do you sale the baby

  • @AndrewGilpatric662
    @AndrewGilpatric662 Год назад

    Take the feeder of the box a piece of cardboard the width of the box then move all of the chicks to one side and take them out one-by-one without chasing them

  • @amorpets949
    @amorpets949 Год назад

    Nice

  • @wynott5128
    @wynott5128 10 месяцев назад

    If you release them. How hold should they be? And are they able to survive on there own? How far do they disperse

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  10 месяцев назад +1

      I’d say the pheasants are able to survive on their own at 16 weeks old. Their feathers don’t fully develop until closer to 20 weeks. Pheasants have lots of predators so it’s rare that you encounter a 2 year old bird in the wild. They will disperse to the best habitat in the area and hang out there.

    • @raprock5000
      @raprock5000 8 месяцев назад

      I release them at 8 weeks with good success. But I also have good cover, food plots and swamp willow for cover.

  • @dylanhansen5235
    @dylanhansen5235 Год назад +1

    where did you order them from?

    • @foorlife632
      @foorlife632 Год назад

      I seen them on the Murray McMurray website. You have to purchase a minimum of 30. I don't like that the game birds have to be purchased in such large numbers. I have never raised or eaten pheasant, so I don't know if I'd like it. I would rather start with 5. Jumping in on 30 is a huge commitment. I also live in ohio and was unaware of the game bird license. That is nice to know in case I do decide to raise them in the future.

    • @raprock5000
      @raprock5000 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@foorlife632 I definitely wouldn't bother if you don't want to start with at least 20. I just don't think it's worth the investment. JMO

  • @thesilentanimator9409
    @thesilentanimator9409 11 месяцев назад

    does anybody know where to get pheasant hatching eggs?

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  11 месяцев назад

      You can have pheasant eggs or chicks delivered to your local post office. A quick web search can help you find a breeder closest to your location.

    • @raprock5000
      @raprock5000 8 месяцев назад

      MacFarlane Pheasant Farm in Wisconsin. Or eBay sells eggs during the right season for them.

  • @mwwhatup
    @mwwhatup Год назад

    I'm pretty sure I probably could have caught them a little different. Maybe put the whole transport box in there, with this side cut out but not all the way cut. Put the heat lamp above the transport box and waited for night time. But I don't raise birds

  • @danielleterry2331
    @danielleterry2331 Год назад

    Where did you get these? I want to get a few and raise them in my leanto that I raise my meat chickens in it looks a lot like your pen 10x28 ft.

  • @johnjude2685
    @johnjude2685 8 месяцев назад

    I shot a young male without the white ring but had colored in saddle and tail feather. It did definitely cackle when flush, and before I shot, I'm saying it's a male and legal game bird my buddy claimed it was a hen.
    Question does a hen cackle when flush I say they don't only males.

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  8 месяцев назад

      Young roosters and hens look similar. A rooster will usually cackle when flushed. The hens are usually silent and I don’t think are able to cackle or at least it’s not a usual behavior.

  • @TUTTOFIGARO
    @TUTTOFIGARO Год назад

    bonjour. désolé je n'ai pas compris la piece rouge que vous leur mettez au bec. ça sert a quoi ? merci.

    • @WordsPhotos
      @WordsPhotos Год назад

      Le but du morceau de plastique rouge est de les empêcher de se voir. Le mâle attaque pour la domination et le territoire. De cette façon, ils ne voient que ce qu'ils mangent.

  • @jamesclaiborne1163
    @jamesclaiborne1163 Год назад

    How much roughly did it cost you to get started. I’m broke af but love pheasants.

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  Год назад +2

      To build the pheasant pen, it costed a few hundred dollars worth of materials and a month's worth of weekends to build. Chicks can be bought online for a couple dollars a piece. Feed, heating lamps, and water containers are also a couple hundred dollars over the course of the raising season. All said and done, a $1000 might be a ballpark estimate for a few dozen birds.

    • @jamesclaiborne1163
      @jamesclaiborne1163 Год назад

      @@schmitzfarmandoutdoors sweet thank you. I guess we’ll see what happens next year 😏

  • @President.GeorgeWashington
    @President.GeorgeWashington 8 месяцев назад

    I am about to start raising pheasants here in Michigan to release into the wild for conservation efforts. I am wondering, how old were the chicks when you moved them from the cardboard box to the large outdoor pen? and what was the purpose of doing that?

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  8 месяцев назад +1

      The pheasant chicks were about 3-4 weeks old when I moved them from the garage to the outdoor pen. They need to have their feathers starting to grow and outside temperatures needs to be warm enough. Heating lamps can help. Move them outside for more space to grow.

    • @raprock5000
      @raprock5000 8 месяцев назад +1

      You'll definitely want to get them in a outdoor pen if you're going to release them it's a huge difference in success. A bird raised inside a shed the whole time has very little success of making it.

  • @1MrNimrod
    @1MrNimrod Год назад

    Do you ever raise any through the winter? I’m curious if you need to keep water that’s not froze? I’m in MN.

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  Год назад +1

      Yes, I have raised pheasants throughout the winter and a bucket heater is necessary to keep the water from freezing. The main issue I run into is when the ground thaws in spring, the pen floods and the birds are unable to dry themselves,

  • @Grimdarkog
    @Grimdarkog Год назад

    what do you do with them? Just eat em?

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  Год назад +2

      The pheasants that I have raised usually are used for training hunting dogs. Afterwards, the pheasants can be used for making pheasant alfredo pizza and several other delicious recipes. Also, I have sold some to local people looking to raise birds for themselves.

    • @stingingmetal9648
      @stingingmetal9648 Год назад

      @@schmitzfarmandoutdoors As local/personal meat/food production becomes more popular and in demand, do you think you will see an increase in people raising them for meat?

    • @raprock5000
      @raprock5000 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@stingingmetal9648They actually have a jumbo strain of pheasant for meat and a white strain similar to a white turkey for meat. They get larger than the wild strain of pheasant.

  • @stingingmetal9648
    @stingingmetal9648 Год назад

    So what is the purpose of raising them? Is it mainly for meat? If you have a rooftop coop/enclosure, of a decent size, is it practical to be raising them for meat?

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  Год назад +2

      I primarily raise the pheasants to be game birds and for training hunting dogs. Although they are good eating, I see chickens as a more practical option because they grow larger in a shorter amount of time.

  • @ShadowGKCP
    @ShadowGKCP Год назад

    Looking at this video I get the impression that handling them is a big problem for both the owner and the birds. I feel like there should be a better way to do it. May be gas them all at once with something that makes them painlessly fall asleep? Or soak their food in the said tranquilizer and feed it to them before a big move?

    • @dylanhansen5235
      @dylanhansen5235 Год назад

      I don't think there's a single person in their right mind that would do that. If you are going move them all a once you just go in and catch them at night its a lot easier because they can't see in the dark.

  • @scottgoldsberry2730
    @scottgoldsberry2730 Год назад

    Do you all sell birds online?

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  Год назад +1

      In the past I’ve sold birds to local dog owners for training or people just looking to raise a flock of their own. Haven’t sold them online though.

    • @scottgoldsberry2730
      @scottgoldsberry2730 Год назад

      @@schmitzfarmandoutdoors I'm looking for a couple of wings, so I can put the feathers on some arrows. They are beautiful birds👍

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  Год назад

      @@scottgoldsberry2730 What state are you located in? I can see what I have for pheasant wings.

  • @larrykraft4994
    @larrykraft4994 Год назад

    The hawks and other predators will eat them in a week

  • @bradybiddix4738
    @bradybiddix4738 Год назад +5

    How big is your Pen? I’m building one in March

    • @schmitzfarmandoutdoors
      @schmitzfarmandoutdoors  Год назад +2

      The inside dimensions of the pen are 10 ft by 30 ft. The height is about 7 ft. Each bird needs about 10 square feet to be comfortable. I try to add logs to give them cubic feet area so I can put about 50 birds in my pen.

  • @anthonyresto8596
    @anthonyresto8596 Год назад +3

    What are the blinders for?

    • @gatortater1853
      @gatortater1853 Год назад +3

      Prevent pecking others

    • @archangel20031
      @archangel20031 Год назад +2

      @@gatortater1853 How long do the blinders stay on the birds?

    • @gatortater1853
      @gatortater1853 Год назад +3

      @@archangel20031 until butcher or release

  • @chirinetahir2749
    @chirinetahir2749 5 месяцев назад

    You are cruel

  • @chriskeim5699
    @chriskeim5699 Год назад +4

    What are the blinders for?

    • @plainandsimple1
      @plainandsimple1 Год назад +3

      theyre extremely aggressive towards each other, so the blinders help stop the pecking.