R. Chapman wrote:Nope, 200 flying right up in your face 10 yards away is just cool.
What about having 200 land right in your face less than 15 feet away.
Have you ever had a large flock so close you could feel their wing beats?
R. Chapman wrote:Nope, 200 flying right up in your face 10 yards away is just cool.
Woody wrote:R. Chapman wrote:Nope, 200 flying right up in your face 10 yards away is just cool.
What about having 200 land right in your face less than 15 feet away.
Have you ever had a large flock so close you could feel their wing beats?
Tomkat wrote:I like hunting both. I prefer to eat ducks over geese. But I am an equal opportunity killa.
The most important thing is to have a proper gangsta hat on when you hunt them.
aunt betty wrote:Woody wrote:R. Chapman wrote:Nope, 200 flying right up in your face 10 yards away is just cool.
What about having 200 land right in your face less than 15 feet away.
Have you ever had a large flock so close you could feel their wing beats?
It's a rush. The last few hunts I got where for kicks I'd try calling them in the dark as soon as I hear wings. They'll land right on top of you. They pick their way thru the trees in the star light. Amazing.
i do that all the time. Setting out two dozen full bodies is no where near as simple as throwing out two dozen floaters. Clearly it's a matter of opinionMNkid7 wrote:Redbeard wrote:I'm with ya here Ron. The simplicity of duck hunting is appealing. As is, as stated above, watching the sun rise over the waterRonE wrote:Ducks, ducks, ducks! But it is easy to pass up a duck hunt for a good goose hunt. Goose hunting is too equipment intensive for me. Give me 5-10 doz duck decoys a boat and a shotgun and something to eat and drink and I'm duck hunting. Give me a 4 wheeler, about 1000 rags to put out and pick up, a layout blind and I'm goose hunting, much more work.
You haven't experienced simplicity until you drive into a field, set out the decoys and blinds and you're good to go. Plus the sunrise can be just as good out of a field.
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
if I knew 200 ducks were loafing on a little pool in a creek, I'd come back and set up there the next dayGadwallGetter530 wrote:R. Chapman wrote:Tomkat wrote:Redbeard wrote:no way jump shooting is more fun that decoyingR. Chapman wrote:Ducks definitely. I've been on a few goose hunts were we all limited out in half an hour. That's alright but but jump shooting ducks is just fun.
Its a different kind of fun, like banging the preachers daughter (and her sister)
I only jump snows btw.
Red, it's the funnest thing when you jump 200 ducks off a little pool in a creek. That's excitement.
Kid. Its funner to land 200 ducks.
gila-river wrote:Great, now the cops want to install dishwashers to. Just do your job Red and stop encroaching on our rights to replace appliances. That is not the responsibility of police.:lol:
Woody wrote:aunt betty wrote:Woody wrote:R. Chapman wrote:Nope, 200 flying right up in your face 10 yards away is just cool.
What about having 200 land right in your face less than 15 feet away.
Have you ever had a large flock so close you could feel their wing beats?
It's a rush. The last few hunts I got where for kicks I'd try calling them in the dark as soon as I hear wings. They'll land right on top of you. They pick their way thru the trees in the star light. Amazing.
One of my most memorable hunts happened just last year. Before light on a very small creek maybe 15 feet across. We had multiple groups of 50+ try to land, but the creek is so narrow they were forced to wait their turn and they seemed to hover right over heads for minutes. Some of them I swear I could have reached out and touched.
aunt betty wrote:True but imagine sitting or standing by a tree kicking water to make little ripples while flat out wailing on your duck call and getting the 200 to land within gun range.
assateague wrote:Sometimes the quickest way to put out a fire is with an explosion.
Redbeard wrote:i do that all the time. Setting out two dozen full bodies is no where near as simple as throwing out two dozen floaters. Clearly it's a matter of opinionMNkid7 wrote:Redbeard wrote:I'm with ya here Ron. The simplicity of duck hunting is appealing. As is, as stated above, watching the sun rise over the waterRonE wrote:Ducks, ducks, ducks! But it is easy to pass up a duck hunt for a good goose hunt. Goose hunting is too equipment intensive for me. Give me 5-10 doz duck decoys a boat and a shotgun and something to eat and drink and I'm duck hunting. Give me a 4 wheeler, about 1000 rags to put out and pick up, a layout blind and I'm goose hunting, much more work.
You haven't experienced simplicity until you drive into a field, set out the decoys and blinds and you're good to go. Plus the sunrise can be just as good out of a field.
R. Chapman wrote:aunt betty wrote:True but imagine sitting or standing by a tree kicking water to make little ripples while flat out wailing on your duck call and getting the 200 to land within gun range.
Betty, you have no idea how much I want to hunt in flooded timber, it beats my "want" to hunt sea ducks off the coast; that's saying something.
goodkarmarising wrote:I will pass up ducks to chase snow geese any day of the week. Its a terrible addiction.
aunt betty wrote:R. Chapman wrote:aunt betty wrote:True but imagine sitting or standing by a tree kicking water to make little ripples while flat out wailing on your duck call and getting the 200 to land within gun range.
Betty, you have no idea how much I want to hunt in flooded timber, it beats my "want" to hunt sea ducks off the coast; that's saying something.
It's fun but repetitive and eventually you'll want to lay in one of them tiny midget 'jehler' boats. lol
Rick wrote:aunt betty wrote:R. Chapman wrote:aunt betty wrote:True but imagine sitting or standing by a tree kicking water to make little ripples while flat out wailing on your duck call and getting the 200 to land within gun range.
Betty, you have no idea how much I want to hunt in flooded timber, it beats my "want" to hunt sea ducks off the coast; that's saying something.
It's fun but repetitive and eventually you'll want to lay in one of them tiny midget 'jehler' boats. lol
Real green timber hunting on a crisp, clear morning when the ducks are down and falling in like bright leaves is something all God's waterfowlers should experience. But when it ain't working, and the new of your buddies' voices echoing off the wood and water and just being part of such a hallowed scene wears off, the view can get entirely too familiar.
No tide.aunt betty wrote:That is intriguingly tempting to try that coastal marsh stuff but I know better. The tide would kick my ass.
huh no had it before that but can't remember where fromaunt betty wrote:DeWitt huh...
Did you get that hat at macks while you wuz dere?
it was fun.held us over till our second splitRick wrote:Lot of Louisiana boys migrate north to hunt mallards and specks in Arkansas. Friend who also leases from us is in a camp up there and is fond of pointing out that his speck calls are "tuned for Arkansas," but I suspect that will change as more and more folks start targeting them there.
Who me ya that's where I kill the majority of specklebelliesassateague wrote:You guys are aware that geese land in water too, right?
hudson wrote:Who me ya that's where I kill the majority of specklebelliesassateague wrote:You guys are aware that geese land in water too, right?
gotchaassateague wrote:hudson wrote:Who me ya that's where I kill the majority of specklebelliesassateague wrote:You guys are aware that geese land in water too, right?
Nah, just in general. Everyone seemed to be saying that they didn't want to drive out into a field and set decoys. Nothing like watching and hearing a goose splash down in the bay.
that's where I kill most of my specs.assateague wrote:You guys are aware that geese land in water too, right?
hudson wrote:Who me ya that's where I kill the majority of specklebelliesassateague wrote:You guys are aware that geese land in water too, right?
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