Thanks guys. My dad said there is a big white one with a black ring around the neck hanging around the house. Thought it was a pigeon, but said it was a dove. So he is gonna break out the pellet gun and try to get him.
I'm due for a good dove hunt. Might go visit Greg soon.
Thanks for the heads up on the taste and cooking tips.
Kique
Enrique O. Ramirez CLAN OF THE BORDER RATS - Member
"..faith is being sure of what you hope for and certain of what you do not see.." Hebrews 11:1
Haven't tasted any difference between any of the doves. My favorite way to eat em is to salt&pepper then brown then throw in the crockpot with cream of whatever soup and some onion, cook for a couple hours then throw in some taters, go till taters are done and eat
Deserve's got nuthin to do with it- Willam H Munny
You can't tell the difference in taste from white wings and mourning doves if you wrap them in a pepper and bacon and grill them. I've eaten as many of them as I have white wings and there's no difference to me... Grub up...
---------------------------------------- I'm a big fan of the courtesy flush.
slobbers, drools, goes and checks for "Bird Loads".
....not really,.....I can just live trap them here.
The Gambels (2-300) are off limits here,.....that's just the way it's gotta' be.
life is good.
GTC
Member, Clan of the Border Rats -- “Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it.”- Mark Twain
We've not seen much difference in the taste from Mournings, but they are a bit larger, which is good. They're a bit slower, too, which is realllly good for me..
We're gonna try the Atomic Buffalo turds this year. Just a bit different from the way we usually cook 'em.
(Pardon this guy's pronunciation of "Jalapenos")
"The Bigger the Government, the Smaller the Citizen" - Dennis Prager LINK
Thanks guys. My dad said there is a big white one with a black ring around the neck hanging around the house. Thought it was a pigeon, but said it was a dove. So he is gonna break out the pellet gun and try to get him.
I'm due for a good dove hunt. Might go visit Greg soon.
Thanks for the heads up on the taste and cooking tips.
Kique
Your description doesn't sound like a collared dove. They aren't white. They're about the color of a mourning dove, maybe a slightly lighter brown. Also, they don't have a ring around the neck. It's a black stripe across the back of the neck. It doesn't come around to the front. They can be recognized by their call, though. It's a 3 note coo. 2 coo's together, followed by a slight pause and a 3d coo. It sound's nothing like a mourning dove and is distinctly different than pigeons.
“In a time of deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act.” ― George Orwell
It's not over when you lose. It's over when you quit.
In the past few years I have had collared doves (two or three pairs) visit my feeder and even nest on the ground in my bushes.
Here are a couple of interesting links to the collared doves in the U.S. and a piece about the first reported sighting of a collared dove in Oklahoma back in 1995.
"All that the South has ever desired was that the Union, as established by our forefathers, should be preserved, and that the government, as originally organized, should be administered in purity and truth." – Robert E. Lee
Thanks guys. My dad said there is a big white one with a black ring around the neck hanging around the house. Thought it was a pigeon, but said it was a dove. So he is gonna break out the pellet gun and try to get him.
I'm due for a good dove hunt. Might go visit Greg soon.
Thanks for the heads up on the taste and cooking tips.
Kique
Your description doesn't sound like a collared dove. They aren't white. They're about the color of a mourning dove, maybe a slightly lighter brown. Also, they don't have a ring around the neck. It's a black stripe across the back of the neck. It doesn't come around to the front. They can be recognized by their call, though. It's a 3 note coo. 2 coo's together, followed by a slight pause and a 3d coo. It sound's nothing like a mourning dove and is distinctly different than pigeons.
There's tons of collared doves that roost in big dead tree behind my house and there's one that's all white. I need to break out the spotting and see if has a collar or not. It's the same shape and size of the other doves but I don't know if it's an albino collared dove or a white dove that somehow got loose.
We have them here and they range in color from the normal dove to mostly white. They cook up just like doves as well as feral rock doves. Marinate them in what ever you like,but we take the meat off the breast bone.
There's tons of collared doves that roost in big dead tree behind my house and there's one that's all white. I need to break out the spotting and see if has a collar or not. It's the same shape and size of the other doves but I don't know if it's an albino collared dove or a white dove that somehow got loose.
I think collared doves, the white phase, are the ones that they release at weddings and stuff, and how they got here.
The only thing worse than a liberal is a liberal that thinks they're a conservative.
The difference being about like wild versus domestic turkeys in that domestic Ringnecks are dumb as a post when they get loose and rarely survive.
So, your big white dove could be just a pale (leucistic) version of a wild Collared Dove, an escaped Ringneck, or maybe a hybrid.
All three possibilities are edible.
Birdwatcher
"...if the gentlemen of Virginia shall send us a dozen of their sons, we would take great care in their education, instruct them in all we know, and make men of them." Canasatego 1744