6,000 pheasants have flown the coop

SHARON —Sharon Pheasant Farm proprietor Robert Wilbur said approximately 6,000 birds escaped from the farm (which is near the center of town on Route 41), during last week’s snowstorm. “The wet snow and winds damaged the pens where the pheasants are kept,” he said. “The wet snow just tore through everything.”Wilbur said the pheasant farm is faced with two challenges right now: recovering the escaped pheasants and rebuilding the damaged pens. The lost avians have to be recaptured, too, when possible. Once the weather warmed up a bit, by midweek, the birds were wandering from the safety of the farm and visiting nearby lawns. Some ventured out by foot onto Route 41. Although most seemed to know enough to get out of the way of motor vehicles, there were some feathers on the road that were probably pheasant feathers.“We are picking up birds little by little,” Wilbur said. “But 6,000 is a lot of birds.”Although many of the pheasants seemed to want to stay near home, and were easily spooked by humans walking toward them, Wilbur noted that even though they live in captivity the birds are wild and can fly. Wilbur said he thinks the escapees are no more than a mile from the farm. “They are hardy, sturdy birds who can take care of themselves,” he said. “They do not have to be fed, they find their own food. I am not worried about them surviving.”Sharon Pheasant Farm raises the birds for sale all over the country. According to their website, the pheasants, whether newborn or mature, are delivered locally and regionally by truck or shipped via the U.S. Postal Service to more distant destinations.When asked how many of the pheasants had been recovered, Wilbur said, “I really don’t know, we’re just so busy reconstructing the pens right now.”

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