I am planning on putting up an 8-12 foot fence around the 13 aces closes to and surrounding our house...we have 50 but I have an organic orchard on the 13 and that is where I want my free ranging done as there is plenty of wind fall fruit and plenty of the bugs that eat them! and this helps immensely with the pests in the orchard as well

I also was planning on clipping one wing for the 1st season they are allowed to free range...I have heard people have great success with this method...I will also be purchasing a license as I already have to be licensed for my dogs and she said it will be no problem for the pheasants.....
Now to find the perfect house for them

I was thinking more along the lines of a tower...maybe 12' tall, with 6" boards put along the sides, slanted, so that they can run up and down them to the top of the tower, where I will have a roost...I have read that they like this more than simply jumping to the perches as it reminds them of their natural habitat of the sides of mountains....anyone here, hear of this?
I will be doing most of it in wire mesh (not chicken wire but the hard steel kind) on the bottom and with see through tin for a roof...in hopes that them being raised where they can see their surroundings will make them less nervous for their first few outings...I will also probably start with a 40x40 8' tall fence around the tower for their first 2-4 weeks out of the tower and then depending on how they are doing maybe expand it to 100x100....only once I feel they are comfortable with their surroundings and know how to get back to their tower for safety will I begin my free range experiments
Right now I have a bevy of banie roosters haha every time they hatch out eggs all the babies are roo's...we are up to 10 roo's with only 3 girls! but they do not bother the girls, though I keep hoping some of the hachings will eventually be female! They have their own flock and do not mingle with our egg chickens....We have one baby right now that is 4 weeks old...and yes another boy! but they get along and they are excellent sky watchers and they have taught the rest of my poultry...even the ducks and geese that when they crow you run for cover...I am hoping that the pheasants will pick up on this as well! but only time will tell