A Fine Christmas Eve Shoot

Steve Sanford

Well-known member
All~

I have enjoyed a long run of memorable hunts on the day before Christmas - and this morning kept the tradition alive with a very nice shoot - hard won after such a duck-free season.

This photo is a bit misleading - the Hen was from an earlier hunt. Today's take was 3 Drake Mallards but only 2 made it home with me.


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We have finally found some birds in one of our usual late-season haunts. In a typical year, the ponds and marshes are frozen by now and Mallards and Blacks move to the rivers. The rivers usually are edged with ice and snow and provide many beautiful and satisfying hunts. However, it is currently 71 degrees and so every little pond or puddle is available. But, it being a Dearth-of-Ducks year, it hardly matters. Ducks are just hard to find.

The river we have been hunting the past few days is small but "flashy" - a little bit of rain raises the levels and the flows. For example, today was at least a foot higher than Tuesday AND the flow has increased - as per USGS gages - almost four-fold. So, hunt planning - especially for retrieving downed birds - can be tricky.

Partner Cap'n Nemo and Loyal Assistant Boo stood in bed this morning, so I was both solo and without the services of a retrieving dog. Nevertheless, I made most of the right decisions and thoroughly enjoyed a couple of hours bankside.

After watching almost 20 Blacks in and out of the rig from about 10 minutes "too early" until sunrise, 4 Mallards roared downstream - barreling in like Broadie-beaks - and shooting was strictly of the "self-defense" variety. My trusted Model Twelve - aka "Locomotive Breath" - spoke twice and accounted for a sweet double. Shortly after retrieving 2 spectacular, fully-plumed drakes, another pair threatened my very existence - and the Drake fell. As per the Standard Operating Procedure, all three were "dead-in-the-air" - but I had to watch the last one float downstream faster than I could run. Since Boo was not along, I should have had a boat. With only 3 days to go up here in dairy country (NY's Southeast Zone), he was my first lost bird for the season.

I should have ended my hunt with a fourth drake - a Black Duck - as well, but suffered a brief bout of E. C. S. - Empty Chamber Syndrome. A la erstwhile gunning partner Cap'n Fencepost, I sent him scurrying upstream with nothing but a dry CLICK to remember me by....

Next year I will stash a canoe at this spot in early December.

And - in light of the ambient temperatures - all of the Mallard fillets are now resting comfortably in my freezer.

Merry Christmas to All!

SJS

 
Steve, I did not get out for my annual Christmas Eve hunt as I had to travel down to my sister's house in Mass, but we did get out yesterday on salt water and found a few birds despite a heavy fog that had them wanting to stay put. I'm looking at the Monday and Tuesday forecasts--a bit of cold Monday and a storm that may be snow or sleet on Tuesday--as decent opportunities to close the season.

68 on the bank thermometer in Salem, MA, at 4 pm today!
 
Nice shoot Steve. I tried taking Maxx out for a Christmas Eve hunt yesterday afternoon. Unfortunately still not much in the way of ducks around these parts. We saw a single high flying swan and an unidentifiable duck fly through that wouldn't come down low enough to ID. We had a good time still and Maxx was happy to be out of the house.
Have a Merry Christmas!
Steve
 
We also made it out, despite the weather forecast, with some good reports from other hunters we decided to take a chance. The wind out of the south south east at 18mph had the bay whipped up and it was a rough ride out but we got set up and watched the flocks fly by, then moved and got a black duck in location number two, and then moved again and finally got in the flyway. Connor posted the final results on the traveling decoy thread.
 
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