Just curious; whats the longest tail you've had on a bird?
Isaac and Banks


I learned a trick at a Montana FWP check station from the lady biologist checking game: hold the pheasant by its lower jaw and lift it. If the beak bends/breaks it is a juvenile bird. I usually check all the roosters I shoot and they are almost always <1 year old birds. Many times big, long tailed birds make me think they are older, but they usually are not.cutty72 wrote:24" is a nice tail.
I have a pickup headliner full of 21-22s, longest was just over 23. Mostly all 1 year old birds.
I was basing my aging off of spurs, like LtsHnt said.Wyobio wrote:I learned a trick at a Montana FWP check station from the lady biologist checking game: hold the pheasant by its lower jaw and lift it. If the beak bends/breaks it is a juvenile bird. I usually check all the roosters I shoot and they are almost always <1 year old birds. Many times big, long tailed birds make me think they are older, but they usually are not.cutty72 wrote:24" is a nice tail.
I have a pickup headliner full of 21-22s, longest was just over 23. Mostly all 1 year old birds.