PDA

View Full Version : Sandhill Crane



Timbow
09-06-2014, 10:15 AM
Just read an article on hunting them in Manitoba. Has anyone ever eaten one? Never pictured this bird roasting in the oven.

Sofa King
09-06-2014, 10:17 AM
I found some out in one of my hunting areas this summer.
was a shocker to say the least.
a bird that size just strolling through the trees.

https://scontent-a-sea.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpa1/t31.0-8/10631055_628054537314796_5126516717488550338_o.jpg

landphil
09-06-2014, 10:30 AM
We used to get a nesting pair with young every year at out property east of 100 mile though the summer months, but of course, we didn't hunt or eat any as there are no open seasons in BC. I still remember the first time my mom saw one out in the field in the tall grass, having just moved from the Island, she mistook it for a deer until the binoculars came out.:-D

Their distress call is pretty cool.

Steve W
09-06-2014, 11:09 AM
Was on a goose hunt is Sask about five years ago. They were abundant and open to hunt. We only had one small flock come close enough to our set and one of our group took one. Knocked it down with a ten-gauge. He hunted them a bit, but wouldn't let his lab go get it in case it wasn't dead. I guess they can injure a dog pretty badly with the beak they have. He like to eat the occasional one, and said they were quite good. It look like a small plane coming out of the sky when he hit it!

blindcast
09-06-2014, 11:51 AM
Used to live in SK and take one or two time to time while hunting geese in the fields. Big, noisy birds. Nasty too when you winged them, saw one chase a friend of mine all over the field when he went out to dispatch it. Funny for us audience, apparently not so funny for him.

Have tried eating them but didn't like the aroma that came off the meat when we were breasting them and much less the smell of them roasting in the oven. Mostly just ground them up for sausage. With enough flavourings, the sausages weren't half bad. Especially when we were hungry enough.

IronNoggin
09-06-2014, 12:05 PM
... With enough flavourings, the sausages weren't half bad. Especially when we were hungry enough.

Truer words were never spoken! And the same can be said for most moccasins you wander across :wink:

Lived in Sasakachewan a fair while. First few times these 747's flew within range, we gunned them with abandon. Thought was they we a lot more "bang for the buck" than ducks, similar to larger geese. Until we tried to eat them UGH!! Horrid! :icon_frow
The younger of their kin (grey) were a tad better, but we all soon learned NOT to drop them when they flew by due to an upbringing that dictated you ate what you shot. Never Again!

Cheers,
Nog

Steelpulse
09-06-2014, 01:50 PM
Never hunted them but in the kamloops area around the start of october they pass through, and can see them in the 100s even thousands over a couple days whnile they migrate by

Caretaker
09-06-2014, 02:08 PM
We used to hunt them in northern Ontario, called them lawn darts, roasted the breasts up with black ducks, or spexkeled bellies, not to bad.

BigfishCanada
09-06-2014, 02:17 PM
Last week, im unsure if it was whooping or sandhills we saw but we had seen maybe3 or 4 pairs? They are rare and each year i seem to be seeing more and more

popcan
09-06-2014, 04:13 PM
We get them in droves in the spring, and they pair off, breed and nest all over the place, especially near the swamps. Very prehistoric sounding birds.
I've heard you're supposed to soak a sheet of plywood, throw that on a fire with the bird on it, then after a few hours eat the plywood. Its better than the bird.....

but what do I know. :)

Getbent
09-08-2014, 11:48 AM
Jumped 3 of them last week in a cut up by Loon Lake...my son and the dog gave chase and put them up....pretty loud!

Timbow
09-08-2014, 12:16 PM
We get them in droves in the spring, and they pair off, breed and nest all over the place, especially near the swamps. Very prehistoric sounding birds.
I've heard you're supposed to soak a sheet of plywood, throw that on a fire with the bird on it, then after a few hours eat the plywood. Its better than the bird.....

but what do I know. :)

I heard of the same cooking method but with a loon. At least with wood you could make tooth picks....

I think I'll pass.....

Drillbit
09-29-2014, 07:24 PM
Can they be shot to protect property?

Drillbit
09-30-2014, 12:17 AM
Looks like there might be permit allocated through Canadian Wildlife Services to protect crops.

Has anybody dealt with them?

Looking_4_Jerky
09-30-2014, 12:19 PM
Tried whooping crane once, but it was a bit rare for me....:lol:

albravo2
09-30-2014, 12:26 PM
We were up in 5-02 over the weekend. Huge flocks, too high to identify for sure, but the croaking sure sounded like cranes. Really cool to hear. It must have been loud because they were up pretty high but the noise was very significant.

Drillbit
09-30-2014, 05:06 PM
We were up in 5-02 over the weekend. Huge flocks, too high to identify for sure, but the croaking sure sounded like cranes. Really cool to hear. It must have been loud because they were up pretty high but the noise was very significant.

Yep 5-2 this time of year.

There's 1000's of them in the Barley. Trying to contact Canadian Wildlife Service for a permit to save the crop.

Drillbit
09-30-2014, 08:12 PM
Anybody have the direct contact info for the CO in Williams Lake or Quesnel?

BigSlapper
09-30-2014, 09:37 PM
Thousands overhead of Tunkwa Lk area this past wknd. Noisy but neat to see. Same flight path and time each year - have seen them now many years in a row. Man do they fly the perfect V at a height that none others fly at (2,000 - 3,000 ft?)