I enjoy it much more than with a scattergun. I have hunted Canadian geese, ducks, pheasants and partridge. Only one of those I have yet to kill is a partridge. Hit one with a judo, and it just made it fly faster. Use broadheads and flu flu arrows when hunting alone, and especially WITHOUT a dog present. Ace hex heads are my choice when a dog is present. ALWAYS got to think of safety. Stabbing a dog with broadheads or field points just are not worth the risk of bagging a bird.
If you are hunting pheasants, there is a point where they stop in mid liftoff to advance forward. That is when you want to shoot. Think of it like this and try it at home...Have someone throw up a football in the air, and as the ball is rising, throw a golfball at it. See how close you can get. Now do it again, but wait till the football reaches about 15 feet, and gravity overcomes the upward momentum. The football will hang there for a second before making it's decent. What do you think is easier to hit, a moving target or a stationary one? But you have got to be quick.
As for geese, you will have to design your own way, but I like kneeling down hunched over covered in camo (to match what is there), right in the middle of where you have planned on the geese landing (according to your decoy setup). Yes it is uncomfortable, but when their landing gear is set, and you have a football sized target at 15 yards or less coming right at you, the reward is worth the discomfort.