Darren wrote:SpinnerMan wrote:
If I shoot 2 boxes of shells at ducks, I had a good year.
So no, short stopping isn't in fact an issue. I've got two boxes packed for every hunt, and I'm sure Rick can tell you all about clowns blowing through multiple boxes per hunt in his blind.
I'm off the flyway and they don't show in big numbers until AFTER the season ends most years.
They are short stopping us all the way up here many years.
If you add up all the ducks that I see over the course of a year. A typical year, I'll bet the average is that I see 95% of them
after the season has closed. The swarms of ducks do not show until everything to the north is froze and we have snow on the ground. We'll have days, and not that many, where we will see hundreds, but thousands just doesn't happen until the season is over normally. Being off the flyway, some years we get decent numbers during the season and some years we get nothing with no seeming reason why one year is different than another.
Although, I shoot a lot less since my dog passed. The dog owner ends up shooting most of the cripples. I remember one year thinking why am I going through so many shells when I got so few duck? Then I realized. I end up shooting everybody else's cripples.

I do pretty good on my shell/bird ratio. Well, most of the time.

Some people shoot just as fast as they can. I can tell you what bird I shot at, how I (thought) I approached the shot, what I did differently when a follow up was needed, ... I try to make every shot count and do OK. That helps keep the shell count down.
The other thing that keeps my shot count down is that I don't shoot working mallards generally until they are feet down. It also keeps my bag down, but I have more fun working them than whacking them first pass. It costs me some birds, but I have a lot more fun with the ones we do get trying to work them all the way in. If they bug out, so be it. I'm just happy I got to play.