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Black Lab sniffs out pheasant hunters

Printed From: The BaitShop
Category: Hunting
Forum Name: Birds and Bird Dogs
Forum Description: Upland birds, turkey, waterfowl - and man's best friend!
URL: http://www.baitshopboyz.com/forum_posts.asp?TID=9336
Printed Date: 26 March 2026 at 21:16
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Topic: Black Lab sniffs out pheasant hunters
Posted By: TasunkaWitko
Subject: Black Lab sniffs out pheasant hunters
Date Posted: 15 November 2005 at 08:01
Black Lab sniffs out pre-season pheasant hunters

Her name is Katie, not McGruff, but the black Labrador’s nose for birds
helped bust a group of Oklahoma hunters who got a jump-start on this
fall’s pheasant season.

The incident occurred in late September in Sheridan County, when Katie’s
owner, a Fish, Wildlife & Parks employee, let her out of his vehicle along a
county road near Antelope. Katie immediately dashed beneath a bridge,
and when she refused to come to his call, the FWP employee went to
retrieve her. He found Katie engrossed in the contents of a large garbage
bag that had been stashed under the bridge. Inside, the employee found
more than a dozen recently killed rooster pheasants, which raised his
suspicions since the October pheasant opener was still a week distant.

The employee monitored the bridge from a distance and at twilight
witnessed a vehicle stop and retrieve the contraband birds. The following
day FWP game wardens searched a hotel room in Plentywood, where they
confiscated 14 roosters, interviewed the suspect hunters and issued
several citations. The case was settled this month in Sheridan County
Justice Court.

The four hunters are all from Cushing, Oklahoma. Kevin and Jerry
Holderread, Sean Jensen and Fred Cussner each will lose hunting
privileges for a year and forfeited about $600 apiece. They were charged
with illegal possession of wildlife and hunting out of season and were
issued written warnings for shooting from a road, hunting without
landowner permission and failure to leave evidence of sex and species
naturally attached to the birds.

“It was just a senseless act that showed total disregard for the animals
and fair chase,” says Ezra Schwalm, a FWP game warden in training who
will be posted in Sheridan County early next year. Schwalm, who led the
investigation, said the hunters admitted killing the birds and said they
knew the pheasant season was closed.

While the Oklahoma men will have to sit out the balance of the pheasant
season, Katie is earning her own type of reward, helping her owner to
consistent limits of well-deserved roosters. This year’s pheasant season
ends Jan. 1, 2006.

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TasunkaWitko - Chinook, Montana

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