Wi pheasant game farms




















Our adult pheasants and partridges are delivered to customers throughout the U. Partridges, and have imported pheasants from the Chinese wild and have retained this wild stock bloodline in our some of our birds.

We take pride in keeping our customers happy and are always willing to share the ideals and ideas that have made our business a success. We host a bi-annual seminar where we share our knowledge of operating our pheasant farm with our community.

As you browse through our website feel free to read through the Core Values that guide our business: humane treatment of our birds, customer satisfaction, business profitability with integrity, employee job satisfaction, stewardship of the Earth, and community involvement. Our site also includes related business news and success stories. Stop by and Meet the Staff that makes our business so successful.

Before you finish your visit, be sure to check out our online store which features a variety of bird meats as well as pheasants for sale. Our online store offers several varieties of pheasant for your table as well as bison, ostrich, and alligator. Pheasant Chick Sales. Pheasant chicks are available from April to August. Our chicks are known for their quality genetics and great livability.

Pheasant Farm Tour. Sporting Clays. Two automatic courses for the beginner, intermediate, or master shooters. Each station simulates a different shot - including grouse, rabbits, woodcock, pheasants, quail, ducks and geese. Walk-on shooting Wednesday — Sunday, April through September. Spring and late summer leagues. Whitetail Hunts. Chicks are then transferred from the rearing facilities to the outdoor range fields until they are released in the fall.

These outdoor range fields are planted with a cover crop that offers shade and cover from the elements along with providing additional feed in the fall.

The DNR continues to stock captive-raised ring-necked pheasants on public hunting grounds; however, philosophy on the stocking program has changed over time. Initially, pheasants were stocked to bolster the wild pheasant population and to provide quality pheasant hunting opportunities.

Subsequent research has proven that, over time, stocked pheasants do not have the survival instincts to evade predators or hunters long enough to significantly contribute to the wild pheasant population. Current stocking efforts aim at providing quality pheasant hunting opportunities on public hunting grounds. Pheasants are stocked weekly beginning the week before opening weekend through November on most properties.

Some properties are stocked in the month of December. Projected stocking efforts on public hunting grounds are available online on our pheasant hunting page. Cooperating clubs sign an agreement [PDF] [Word] which states they agree to provide all labor and costs for raising the birds.

Under this agreement, the clubs have two options to choose from:. The DOC program currently involves conservation clubs that normally receive about 30, rooster chicks annually.

If your club is interested in becoming a DOC cooperator, fill out the application and agreement referenced above and mail to your local wildlife manager. Failure to comply could result in denial of program participation in the future. Private lands open to public hunting are available upon request from the State Game Farm or your local wildlife manager. The Learn to Hunt programs are excellent opportunities to provide hunting experience to novice hunters, introduce pheasant hunting to first-time hunters, and share outdoor experiences with others.

Pheasant Learn to Hunt programs typically include a full day of classroom and field exercises that cover all aspects of pheasant hunting, including safe firearm handling, hunting regulations and ethics, upland gamebird biology and management, dog handling, and proper game cleaning techniques. Students typically start the day in the classroom covering the basic rules of firearm safety then practice their shooting skills on the trap range before heading to the field for a pheasant hunt.

Students are mentored by volunteers and WDNR staff. The State Game Farm is proud to support a program that promotes hunter education and recruitment, safe firearm handling, and wildlife conservation.

If you are interested in finding out more about Pheasant Learn to Hunt programs in your area or would like to sponsor a Learn to Hunt program, check out Learn to Hunt. Horseback and walking field trials are used to evaluate breeding stock, demonstrate training levels obtainable in various breeds, and provide the hunter with a more efficient method of finding and harvesting gamebirds. This facility conducted breeding and propagating experiments on several species of pheasants as well as grouse and prairie chickens.

The Wisconsin Conservation Department, now the Wisconsin DNR, took on this endeavor in response to several successful private introductions of pheasants to the state between Gustav Pabst is given credit for successfully establishing a wild pheasant population in Jefferson and Waukesha counties during this time.

Public support for a state funded program grew as those initial populations expanded and as reports of pheasants providing a sporting challenge to wing-shooters came from surrounding states. The Department expanded its pheasant rearing program over the next several years to include using the Waupun prison farm and acres of land in Fond du Lac Co.

Eggs were shipped from the Fish Creek site to Waupun where they were hatched under setting hens. The chicks were reared by prison labor under the supervision of a full time gamekeeper.

Experimental projects conducted on the Fond du Lac Co. In addition to game birds, the Department, in cooperation with the Wisconsin Raccoon Hunters Association, began a raccoon rearing and stocking program.

Knowledge gained from these studies on methods and costs of captive and wild game production was passed on to private game farms and the general public. Public exhibits of 25 different game bird species, furbearers, black bear, and the rare in southern Wisconsin white-tailed deer were opened to the public.

Over 25, people visited the facility in The game division also set up a series of land management displays and mounted animal exhibits, and took this show on the road to as many county fairs and exhibitions as possible. From the conservation department worked hand in hand with the Works Progress Administration WPA and Civilian Conservation Corps CCC to build a major facility for the propagating and stocking of exotic and native upland game species.

The major emphasis was on the production and distribution of pheasants and other upland game birds.



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