A unit of Lasting
Forests
Sustained forests; sustained profits
evolving since March 30,
1999
Project Pivotal-Rig
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Enterprise 35The Coveyof Project Pivotal-Rig |
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A set of alternative management strategies is available and these, along with other innovative work, will be tried out on Pivotal lands. Practices and strategies found successful may then be suggested for other lands.
Similar to the Deer Group, the Raccoon Group, and the Wild Turkey Group, The Covey is a single-species approach to wildlife management. While in favor of multiple-use and ecosystem management on public land, its staff advances the concept that people wanting maximum benefits from a resource must concentrate on that resource and find its upper limits, then gradually and conservatively back off of that limit to meet other objectives for wildlife and other resources. We start with quail, then decide how much it will cost over the long run to achieve other objectives on the same land (and adjacent lands).
The group publishes books and photographs for profit on quail, conducts tours and field trips, sponsors special hunts, conducts public lectures on quail-land management, establishes survey routes, and provides expert consultation for land owners. It cooperates where feasible with others interested in quail but offers an alternative that is very field-oriented.
| Looking for something different for breakfast? Try quail eggs. They have all the nutrition of chicken eggs but less cholesterol. Place hard-boiled quail eggs in salads for a special treat. Pickled quail eggs are a cocktail-hour favorite. Ask for Pivotal quail recipes. |
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Perhaps working with "Quail Unlimited", this group operates a quail management demonstration area, a dog trial area; sells publications, art, sculptures, and photographs; and operates a quail hatchery and "game farm", selling quail and quail eggs to specialty restaurants. Staff present seminars, hold dog trials and related seminars, sell hunting-dog related art and carvings, and seek grants for studies likely to provide new insights into wild quail population increase or stability of profits. The objective is sustained profits from the quail resource and things closely related to it. .
Quail have declined in some areas of the state because of radical changes in land use, human occupancy, pesticide use, and increase in specialized predators. They can be abundant on areas where the conditions are right, made so by the intensive work of wildlife managers. Not a "multiple-use" program, unusual patterns of land use and use rotation are required. Wishing for the return of high quail populations or expecting land-use reversals is normal ... but the probability of that working is very low. Building on some progress already made with the state programs in quail management, this program demonstrates on the land the high productivity of quail that can be gained with superior management.
See also GPSlips for marking areas of quail flushes.
Estimates
Development costs are $40,000
Estimated annual returns at the end of the 6th year:
Low - $3,000
Mod - $10,000
High - $20,000
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This Web site is maintained by R. H. Giles, Jr.
Last revision June 26,
2002.