This should be fun given OOD uses a bad word checker. I can only find reference on the internet to what the male black grouse from Scotland is called but can't seem to find any reference to the term for a male ruffed grouse.
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This should be fun given OOD uses a bad word checker. I can only find reference on the internet to what the male black grouse from Scotland is called but can't seem to find any reference to the term for a male ruffed grouse.
Dinner?
Can we say rooster to stay in the clear?
But is rooster the correct term? I just think it's odd given their popularity that I can't find any authorittive reference that says the correct term for a male ruffed grouse is whatever. (Except for the black grouse which you definitely could not write here.)
...and as far as "dinner" goes, there was a big male strutting around beside the house yesterday just like a turkey and yes that name fits perfectly now, 'cause he is.
Well "Drummer" seems pretty good. I still think that for some reason there is no "official" name for a male grouse in the same way there is for a male turkey or duck. For such a popular game bird that just seems weird. But let's go with "Drummer".
Slightly off topic but I hope all works out well with your dog.
A long time ago, as I was squirrel hunting, I was surprised by a grouse drumming it's wings as I walked by. I'll never forget how loud it was and how surprised I felt when I heard it. I almost jumped out of my pants!
There's been a few times as I was hunting or scouting, that a grouse was perched in a tree at the edge of the trail, just watching me as I went by. At the time, this was in New York State, which did not allow 22lr to take grouse. Too bad - they were just sitting ducks. So to speak :)
Its amazing how much grouse behaviour varies across their range. Although "up north" they are trail chickens around southern Ontario a member here coined a phrase "E.S.G.'s" evil southern grouse know for busting cover and disappearing the moment you shut the car door.
What is this ruffed grouse you speak of? It's a partridge. While we're at it it's not walleye it's pickerel.
Ruffled Partridge.
Here is SSW Ontario we call wild turkeys "thunder chickens". Never heard of ruffed grouse called thunder chickens in the Parry Sound area (where I bear hunt most springs and falls). Wish we had grouse down here - no pheasants either (unless they are pen raised and released).
YMMV
I agree with Trouslayer
I call it Dinner