Been letting my season wrap-up get away from me, so here, finally, goes...
Date: Whether it was one of the worst of seasons or a fine one depends on which we're referencing.
September teal was the second weakest in memory, superseded only by 2008, when Hurricane Ike met us on the opener and blew very nearly everything out of the region. Even had a morning scratch at the Mudhole this year. Yet, by contrast to most of our area, we were fortunate to enjoy what teal gunning we did, and it's always a treat to be back in the marsh come September.
Would have to dig much farther back to find a first regular season split as sorry as what my hunters had to endure this past one. And any solace to be found in the knowledge that many regional blinds struggled worse was lost to the generally frequent gunfire of others in our or the neighboring marsh. Can't remember ever being more sorely aware that mine is "a big duck blind" because it's isolated from the more broken marsh our little ones prefer to fly. As we generally saw precious few birds large or small, while the blinds to our east (and northern neighbors) enjoyed a much better split thanks to their ringneck and teal opportunities.
Ah, but the second split, when the weather finally blessed us with more big duck mornings was a relief made all the sweeter by the sour taste of September teal and the first regular split.
Time: Aside from a couple or three September afternoons and two for geese in the rice, all of my hunting was done in the morning this year. Simply wasn't going to take paying guests to anything of the three pee-poor blinds we could hunt in the afternoons, and didn't want to put any more pressure on them, or frustrate myself, by play-hunting them.
Location: Very nearly all of my hunting was done at the Mudhole this year, more nearly than in any past season. But I've not come as close to deciding to put it behind me and move to one of our more easterly blinds as I did while looking at barren skies and listening to them shoot little ducks during this season's first split.
By now, I take grinding a pond out of the Mudhole's black-dirt flotant for granted:
108.JPG
But the canes on the blind's island have gotten out of hand, growing taller and more lush than any others in the marsh, presumably from Marsh and my stirring the nutrients in the flotant they're growing in or under it. So rather than just thinning them by hand before the regular season, as has been my practice, I spot-poisoned them at the end of teal with I felt good result.
Cloud Cover: We had what seemed plenty of everything this year and experienced both good and bad hunts in about all of it. But nothing shook my faith in clear skies to help hide hunters who can't or won't help hide themselves.
Wind Direction and Velocity: Though September teal and the first slit were pretty much devoid of weather changes and sucked wind, accordingly, the second split saw more changes in terms of frontal passages than we've grown accustomed to. With most new ducks seeming to show just behind, rather than before or with the fronts.
Our region's prevailing winds are easterly, and we don't often catch the west winds preceding fronts during hunting hours, but they do tend pull what's been staying in the marsh to our end of it. One such this year accounted for a remarkable show of, usually relatively rare there, ringnecks. So many, in fact, that we quit shooting and began photographing them:
030.JPG
Temperature: Along with the second split's fronts came the most cold weather and ice our region has seen in at least a decade, dropping to the teens and "feels like 4" at one point:
009.JPG
Moon phase: I'd think our January fronts helped negate the usual affect of late season moonlight.
Special Notes: Keep telling myself I'm going to use this section to keep closer track of front to flight relationships.
Waterfowl Activity: As noted ad nauseam above, the Mudhole saw near record lows in waterfowl movement during September teal and the first split, but rebounded nicely with weather changes later in the season. A September teal observation I've not already noted and that's been attributed to our lead waterfowl biologist, Larry Reynolds was that those birds may have arrived in force enough earlier this year to have been well enough rested and fed to blow out to points south when all the shooting started.
TO BE CONTINUED...
YOU MUST REGISTER TO VIEW THIS IMAGE.