#ringneck pheasant
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hmtaxidermy · 7 months ago
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A little bit of a refresh and an upgrade for this bobcat mount.
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sunny-possum-pal · 1 year ago
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Ringneck pheasant
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largemouthbassnation · 5 months ago
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Upland: Pheasant Hunting with Bird Dogs
During a nice early spring day I got out for a pheasant hunt in Georgia. This was my first time experiencing a pheasant push and It … source
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ahthedoodle · 1 year ago
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thesandlorde · 4 days ago
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happy new year! here's a bunch of pen drawings from my bluesky that i haven't posted here
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sassyhazelowl · 9 months ago
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Me @ the local exotic bird fair: I'm way too white for this -- oh *gasp* ITS A CHICKEN *immediately bypasses the emus and parrots to see the modern game bantams and old english games in the back*
#my bird talk#its one of those things were you look around and go well someone is the odd one out#it was me#I'm very obviously white super white and woman-presenting#in a large exhibit hall of hispanic and se asian men#it didn't particularly bother me - I mean I lived in Korea for 3 years but I found it funny#the funniest part to me is the chicken sellers were also white women 😂 and they were the only white vendors other than the supply table#white women and hispanic men - biggest fans of chickens unite#I've actually purchased birds from the mom in the mom-daughter duo before#I desperately wanted those chickens tho#and the old english games in the table next to them#2 of my 3 fave chicken breeds the 3rd being sebrights#sadly I purchased 2 diamond doves and that's it#I wanted new colors/blood on the doves and 1-2 button quail roosters#but I was too slow on the button quails and someone else got them while I was buying a dove#next year after I build a bigger aviary and sell most of my canaries I'll try some finches#the new owners of the bird show must be allowing poultry/gamebirds now#b/c there were 2 chicken booths and coturnix and bobwhites and pheasants and mandarin ducks#usually the only birds like that you'd see would maybe be a pair of fancy pigeons or some ringneck doves#the only thing I don't like about that is chickens and ducks carry a lot of yucky things#like theses birds all looked very well taken care of b/c they were clearly showbirds#but I don't know how much vetting they do of the vendors and all it takes is one sick bird
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saint-nevermore · 7 months ago
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formulating my devious plan to study pheasant genetics in relation to colours..........is there any writing out there about this? especially when hybridisation comes into play and the ethics of that in the first place? i have a feeling a lot could be learned about gamefowl colour genetics from seeing what carries over and what doesnt between different pheasant/junglefowl species but its kind of hard to find if that raises major QOL issues aside from low hatchrates?
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paulpingminho · 1 year ago
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creeltaxidermy · 7 months ago
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Buy Ringneck Pheasant Bird Mount Online
Buy ringneck pheasant bird mounts online. You will find excellent quality and variety on the Creel Taxidermy website. Ringneck pheasant mounts are available in various colors and styles at creeltaxidermy.com. Buy now to make your home attractive and unique!
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panfishonthefly · 1 year ago
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Ringneck Pheasant Full Skin - No Tail
Every feather on these #1-grade skins can be used for tying flies. The church window back feathers are perfect for stonefly wing cases, bug wings and spent wings. Rump feathers make great quill bodies and wet fly hackle, and deeply colored metallic body feathers are great for wet fly hackle. These skins come with no head, wings or tail. (Tails and tail feathers are sold separately.)  This product can only ship in the US.
The body feathers from the ringneck pheasant are used on some of Panfish On The Fly’s most popular patterns including the Creature.
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todaysbird · 7 months ago
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I just wanted to say.. your blog makes me SO HAPPY! I don't know what it is about birds but they make me smile and go crazyyyy! I love them so much! I was wondering, since you are the bird expert, do you know any interesting green colored birds? :>
thank you!!! And yes, there's so many interesting green birds! (DID YOU KNOW: many birds APPEAR green, but their feathers are only structured that way. the only 'true' green pigment in birds is turacoverdin, found only in turacos!)
There's the Javan Green-Magpie, now sadly critically endangered
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A personal favorite & common pet, the Indian Ringneck
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Couldn't mention turacos without including them...this one is a White-Cheeked Turaco
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Double-eyed fig parrot...love how vibrant they are
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green broadbill...gotta love a bird with a snoot
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the iridescent shine of the Green Pygmy-Goose!
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the green pheasant...he sure is green and a pheasant
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the green inca (there's lots of nice green hummingbirds, but having green in the name means he takes the cake)
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And, of course, the Green Jay.
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hmtaxidermy · 5 months ago
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I feel like my phone never captures how truly colorful pheasants are 😔
Got to have a little bit of artistic freedom with this one!
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proton-wobbler · 7 days ago
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Great Backyard Bird Off - Schedule & Info
Round One Schedule
Cosmopolitan - posted February 1st & 2nd - 14 polls
Europe - posted February 11th - 9 polls
Africa - posted February 20th - 9 polls
Australia - posted March 1st & 2nd - 20 polls
New Zealand - posted March 11th - 7 polls
Asia - posted March 20th & 21st - 14 polls
the Americas - posted March 29th & 30th - 16 polls
Eurasia - posted April 8th & 9th - 14 polls
Poll Info
There are 8 brackets, with 208 species featured! Ranges were determined either using the self-report feature added to the submission box or with eBird sightings. "Cosmopolitan" is a bracket involving species of birds which were found on at least three continents, regardless of which they were submitted for. "Eurasia" are birds which seem to appear equally between Europe and Asia (majority of the continent, not just Middle East). "the Americas" includes all of the Americas, with US birds removed- granted, some Canadian or Mexican birds can show up in the US, but they're not common enough backyard birds (imo) to have been disqualified.
Please-- feel free to advocate for whichever bird you vote for! I would love to get some more participation with this tournament, especially since this is a poll with popular bird species.
Polls will be a week long, and are tagged #Great Backyard Bird Off. All subsequent reblogs are tagged as #poll reblog. Be sure to block this tag if you want to avoid me spamming your dash. Any reblogs containing support for a species will be tagged #[species] support. Results will be tagged #poll results.
Bird Support Google Form
vvv Participant List under the Read More vvv
Cosmopolitan (28 species)
Black kite, Black-headed gull, Bohemian waxwing, Canada goose, Common buzzard, C. Chiffchaff, C. Kingfisher, C. Loon, C. Myna, C. Nightingale, C. Swift, Eurasian Collared-dove, Eurasian Hoopoe, Eurasian (Common) Kestrel, Eurasian Tree Sparrow, European bee-eater, European (common) starling, Great crested grebe, Great gray owl, Grey wagtail, Little grebe, Ring-necked pheasant, Red-backed Shrike, Rock Pigeon, Rose-ringed Parakeet, Western barn owl, Western cattle egret, White (pied) wagtail
Europe (18 species)
Tawny Owl, Spotless Starling, Red kite, Middle spotted woodpecker, Great spotted woodpecker, Fieldfare, European Stonechat, E. Robin, E. Herring Gull, E. Goldfinch, Eurasian Green Woodpecker, Eurasian Golden Oriole, Eurasian blackcap, Eurasian (Common) Blackbird, Dunnock, Crested tit, Common wood-pigeon, Eurasian Blue tit
Africa (18 species)
African Harrier-hawk, Bearded barbet, Blacksmith lapwing, Bokmakierie, Cape starling, Cape white-eye, Dark-capped bulbul, Hadada ibis, House bunting, Klaas' Cuckoo, Kwevoel (Grey go-away-bird), Nile valley sunbird, Purple-crested turaco, Red-winged starling, Southern double-collared sunbird, Southern masked weaver, Spotted eagle-owl, White-backed mousebird
Australia (41 species)
Yellow Wattlebird, Willie-wagtail, White-faced Heron, Welcome Swallow, Weebill, Tawny Frogmouth, Tasmanian Nativehen, Superb Fairywren, Sulfur-crested Cockatoo, Splendid Fairywren, Sooty Owl, Red-browed Firetail, Red wattlebird, Rainbow lorikeet, Peid currawong, Pheasant coucal, Pacific koel, Noisy miner, Masked lapwing, Magpie-lark, Little corella, Lewin's honeyeater, Laughing kookaburra, Grey fantail, Grey butcherbird, Gang Gang cockatoo, Galah, Eastern spinebill, Eastern rosella, Crimson rosella, Crested pigeon, Crescent honeyeater, Bush stone curlew (thick-knee), Brown thornbill, Black swan, Bell miner, Austarlian ringneck, Australian magpie, Australian Ibis (Bin Chicken), Australasian Swamphen (Pukeko)
New Zealand (14 species)
Kaka, Kakaruwai (South Island robin), Karearea (NZ falcon), Kereru, Koekoea (Long-tailed Koel), Korimako (NZ bellbird), Yellowhead, Piwakawaka (NZ Fantail), Riroriro (Grey Gerygone), Satin Bowerbird, Silvereye (Tahou), Titipounamu (Rifleman), Tomtit, Tui
Asia (28 species)
Asian Koel, Azure-winged Magpie, Black-collared Starling, Brown-eared Bulbul, Colombo (House) Crow, Common Hill-myna, Eastern Buzzard, Japanese Robin, Light-vented Bulbul, Mandarin Duck, Masked Laughingthrush, Olive-backed Sunbird, Oriental Magpie-robin, Oriental Pied Hornbill, Palau Fruit dove, Palla's Gull, Purple-rumped Sunbird, Red-billed Blue magpie, Red Junglefowl, Red-whiskered bulbul, Ruppell's Weaver, Southern Hill-myna, Spotted dove, Swinhoe's White-eye, Whistling Green-pigeon, White-rumped munia, White-spectacled bulbul, Yellow bittern
The Americas (33 species)
Austral Thrush, Bananaquit, Blue-and-white Swallow, Blue-and-yellow Macaw, Bushy-crested Jay, Canada Jay, Chalk-browed Mockingbird, Chimango, Clay-colored Thrush, Common Potoo, Crimson-fronted Parakeet, Eared Dove, Great Kiskadee, Great Thrush, Green-backed Firecrown, Green-headed Tanager, Hoatzin, Lesson's Motmot, Masked Water Tyrant, Pacific Hornero, Pale-breasted Thrush, Plain Parakeet, Red-rumped Cacique, Ruddy Ground Dove, Rufous Hornero, Rufous-bellied Thrush, Rufous-collared Sparrow, Russet-naped Wood rail, Sayaca Tanager, Southern House Wren, Southern Lapwing, White Bellbird, White-crested Elaenia
Eurasia (28 Species)
Black Redstart, Blue Rock thrush, Carrion Crow, Coal Tit, Common Chaffinch, Eurasian Bullfinch, Eurasian Bittern, Eurasian Jackdaw, Eurasian Jay, Eurasian Magpie, Eurasian Nuthatch, Eurasian Oystercatcher, Eurasian Siskin, Eurasian Sparrowhawk, Eurasian Treecreeper, Eurasian Wren, European Greenfinch, Goldcrest, Great Tit, Hawfinch, Hooded Crow, Long-tailed Tit, Mistle Thrush, Northern Lapwing, Rook, Song Thrush, Spanish Sparrow, Yellowhammer
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kedreeva · 10 months ago
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Do you know things about peacock pheasants that you could share? (Any variety, I think they’re super cool and would love to keep some someday maybe)
I do not know very much about peacock pheasants, since I've never kept nor wanted to keep them, but I know that they are a very uncommon, expensive, difficult-to-keep pheasant regardless of which species. I have a friend that keeps a pair, or was keeping a pair of palawans (I think she lost the hen this winter), and even though she keeps peafowl and a few other types of fowl, and has kept himalayan monals before even, these were worse. My understanding is that they need a lot of space, and are delicate, wild birds.
Unless you have a lot of experience keeping pheasants in general, I'd pick a different, hardier breed that is a bit cheaper, like some mutant ringnecks or even varieties of golden pheasant. They're both sought after for pelts and/or meat, and pretty widely available. Even silver or amhearst are easier finds, easier to keep alive, and cheaper to acquire than peacock pheasants (and I mean like, there's a COUPLE of peacock pheasant breeders in the entire US and babies are HUNDREDS of dollars and you'll be on a waitlist, vs if you have $5-20 and are willing to lose sleep for a night you can go get a ringneck or a golden pheasant morph from a bird swap or livestock auction basically every weekend in the summer here) and less of a loss to the community of keepers as a whole if you make mistakes and lose a bird. Obviously no one wants to lose any bird, but the impact to the breeding pool for peacock pheasants is so much greater a loss than it would be for the others, it's just not worth the risk to try to start there, both for you and for the birds.
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sumbluespruce · 2 years ago
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Roadside  Ringneck pheasants along Sage Creek Rd.
3/23
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the-ablest-navigators · 7 months ago
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A clutch of Bobwhite eggs on my land. The ringneck pheasants and quail have abundant habitat here, and it is a beautiful thing to experience. After decades of habitat loss it is heartening to see undisturbed fence rows, preserved prairie, and tall grass for these and many other species.
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