Originally posted by CaliCreole:
Originally posted by oxnam:
My favorite option is to hunt small ditches or creeks that are adjacent to open fields and pastures so that I can freely shoot flu flus and easily recover my arrows.
Thanks! I can think of several areas that meat this criteria. How do you set up do you put in any decoys like roboducks or call at all or is it just a sit and wait, for them to feed and then find water? [/b]
Calling and decoys are important but not nearly as important as finding the "X". The "X" is where the birds are alreading going naturally. Finding this can require a lot of scouting. If you are walking the creek bottom and jump 200 ducks, that is a good indication of a place to setup.
With the areas that you are considering hunting, find out exactly where the birds are resting and which area holds the most birds and focus your attention there.
In the small water, a few decoys can go a long way. Keep in mind that you are trying to mimick the birds natural behavior. If the ducks are usually congregate in small groups, I sure wouldn't put out 2 dozen. When putting out your decoys, having them placed in a little bit of current or in eddies can add a lot of natural movement to your spread. Pick where you think and want the birds to land and leave a landing zone.
Ducks tend and prefer to land into the wind and you will want to position yourself accordingly. You will need to conceal yourself very well but balance that with having good visibility and range of motion for effective shooting. The can be difficult task.
If you are inexperienced, calling will likely be more detrimental than helpful. But with some training and practice, just the right amount of calling can be invaluable.
Ducks can be fickle and unpredictable, so if you are seeing birds and they are ignoring you, change something. Now I am not talking about birds that are 150 yards up and heading somewhere. But if you have birds that are looking for a place to land (flying low, maybe looking side to side a lot, etc), change your spread setup, change your location, change something.
If you have birds that cup their wings and start dropping in but make an abrupt change of course to leave, they flare, you are probably not hidden well enough or making excessive movements.
And after all that have fun! For big game hunting, we wait for perfect opportunities. Bird hunting allows us to take any good opportunity we want. Sometimes we feel inclined to wait for the perfect shot but I guarantee you will kill more birds if you will shoot every time you have a good or great opportunity.