Canvasback

Todd Duncan Tennyson

Well-known member
Here is an old yarn, I am not certain what the deal is with the ? marks.





Canvasback.

To me, the Canvasback captures the essence of waterfowling.

I am not sure why I think of it in this way, but perhaps it is because it embodies things I admire.

It lives in places that are sometimes wild, and faraway. It is a very fast flier, and it is striking in its appearance. I remember when I was a kid reading my father�s Hunting books, and seeing the pictures of the bird in big wintry scenes of places like Chesapeake Bay, and Nova Scotia.


That long sloping bill and Rusty red head. The thing looks fast even when it is sitting in the water.

It makes long trips and on the East coast it a top notch table bird.

There used to be lots of them, but the climate and it�s habitat have gone through some major changes, and today it is just not as numerous as it was 75 years ago.



I hunt in a place where there just aren�t very many of these birds to be had. I have shot maybe 2 in the last 5 years, and seen less than 10 in my life, and it is not as though I am not out there looking for them much. I�d Venture to say I have put in well over 130 hunts in the past 5 years.

Recently, My friends and I were hunting a chosen spot, and we were buzzed by a hen and a drake Canvasback.

I yelled over to Zach and John and said �Hey did you see that?� The birds were too far out by the time I saw them to venture a shot, and I watched them sail past another Blind, and either he did not see them, or allowed them safe passage.


Well, it has been 2 weeks or so, and today I was down in a spot which is near the place the Canvasbacks buzzed us a few weeks ago.

I chucked 4 Canvasback decoys in the spread, just because they are really visible to birds, and it can be a good way to draw them in from a long ways out.

As the sun started to rise, I was looking over the spread, making sure all of them were upright, and there weren�t any tangles.

When I looked over at my Canvasback decoys, I saw 5 of them, and wondered if my friend John put the 5th one out.

Upon a closer look, the 5th one was a real Canvasback. A big drake too, looking noble, sleek and wild. That sloping black bill, the rusty red head and the canvas colored back. It was a perfect match with the decoys.



I watched it and was wishing that it was shooting light, just a minute or 2 away.

I got John�s attention, and we were both were looking at the big drake.

It was swimming around in the decoys, it did not seem to care that we were only 30 yards away. Didn�t seem to care that we were talking, and that our dogs were walking along the shore.


Soon shooting light came, and John asked if I was going to shoot the Canvasback, I said, I think I can just walk over and shoot it in the water.

But then I thought about it for a minute.

And I thought about what that bird represents to me.

John asked again, �what�s the word man, you going to get that Can?�

I wanted to. I just couldn�t sluice it on the water (a literal sitting duck).

I said, �If it gets up and flies then we should shoot it, but we are better hunters than to kill that bird as it swims around.

I really want that Canvasback John, but I want to do it the right way�.

Soon the bird took off and we watched it tear off through the morning sky. Like a Red tipped arrow, flying against a Piercing blue (Ice on the Shore of the river) sky.

I�m glad I got a chance to see one so close, and I�m glad I didn�t sluice that bird, even though a part of me wanted to take it home.

Something I have always liked about waterfowl hunting is that it can be a fun and social endeavor but, other times, like today, It is a deeper and more personal thing. Almost like there is someone out there testing the fabric of which we are made.
 
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Brad, I feel glad that you and a black dog are out there still.

Don't feel bad about not getting many, there were seasons where we'd never even see a single one.
 
I have never shot, shot at, or seen a canvasback when duck hunting. I have never hunted big water much except the shores and marshes of Barnegat Bay, although not out on the bay itself, so that's why. Have never seen a redhead even when not hunting. Been hunting 40 years, and while I have shot some bluebills, broadbills, goldeneyes, ruddies, bufflehead, even an oldsquaw once in a marsh right off the bay, those with red on the head evade me.
 
Good morning, Todd~


As always, a nice piece of writing. I appreciate the sentiments and the respect you showed for the bird. As a general rule, whenever I have found myself asking Should I? or Shouldn't I? the right answer has always been Shouldn't....



I have shot only a single Canvasback in my 54 gunning seasons. The only time I lived near big numbers - on the Niagara River - the season was closed on this spectacular species. I clearly recall, though, the big flocks zooming in their figure-8s over our rig. Sometimes not being able to shoot helps us really see (and hear).


BTW: If we "need" to shoot a duck that is swimming within range - and the bird will simply not jump to yelling or wild gesticulating, I use a different method. If gunning with others, I first announce my intentions, then shoot at the water a yard or so left or right of the sitting duck. Then I or a partner (as pre-arranged) can try their luck with a bird on the wing. In my accounting, the shell is not "wasted" but rather invested toward a more satisfying outcome.


All the best,


SJS




 
The mighty Niagara definitely holds some Cans. I have a family member that lives on the West Niagara, every time we visit I take my binoculars just to watch the birds moving up and down the river.
 
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SJS
this is funny
I'm sitting here on the mighty niagara reading this.
Yet I can not confirm or deny the presence of bull silverbacks on the mighty niagara.
 
Todd,et al
I heartily agree with all the attributes you have given the Canvasback. 40 years ago I used to see them quite often, along with redheads, especially when the weather was real cold. When the season was closed I saw them almost every evening flying by me in range just before quitting time. As soon as they became legal again I stopped seeing these flights!
In my experience another thing that limits their population is that they era not too bright. I've shot one of a pair (the legal limit) and the other one landed in my decoys. Even when I got up to send my dog for the dead one, the live one stayed in the rig. After about 15 minutes he decided to leave! They also seem to decoy quite well,kind of like broadbill--not a good trait to have when you are sought after.
 
I think since I've gotten into duck hunting, there are two coveted birds for me: Bull Sprig and a drake Canvasback. The "can" is far more storied. I read a nice piece on the can a week ago. It outlined it as the "duck of royalty" back in earlier times. I guess that's why they were hunted so much.

I've never seen one. They pass through NJ from time to time. Guys will occasionally get on groups of them. I sit back a lot of times hunting, quietly anxious, wondering if I'll get a shot at "The King."
 

1976 Cans were legal, along with Redheads in the Atlantic Flyway, for the first time in many years. That is when I shot both for the first time.

Since then I have encountered Cans here and there in the USA.

Their figure 8 way of working decoys does not change, if ya give em time to work.


If you want to hunt them where they are, and are willing to work to earn them, get thee to Canada.

You do not wait for the birds to come to you.

If it's a priority in your life, you go to them.

You have only so many years.

They have been around a lot longer, and will still be here when yer gone.







View attachment Canvasback decoy watercolor 2018.jpg
 
We see Canvasback quite regularly in the Gulf marsh of South Louisiana. They are "The King" of ducks in my opinion. I saw a 100's a week ago down at camp but they were flying high and the dead calm weather had them focused on being in other places. I "shot" this Can a few years ago in the marsh, an absolute stud!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zkGQhPICebs
 
You beat me to it: if I was going to recommend someone take a trip for cans, sprigs and redheads, it would be to coastal Louisiana or parts of Texas.

I was fortunate in the years that I hunted Mobile Bay to see and take cans in more years than not. Some years it was zero or one, in a few years I took as many as 6 or 7. Most of the time we saw them as singles or pairs. I can remember only 3 or 4 times I saw them in small flocks.

One day on MS Sound, where cans are more rare than on the eelgrass beds in northern MObile Bay, I heard a ripping sound from behind, sounded and felt like a jet fighter was about to take my head off. Out over and past the decoys a big stud can went, got out about 75 yards, did the perfect figure 8 turn and came crashing back into the redhead and bluebill decoys. One of the most memorable ones I ever saw or shot,

Pintails and widgeon were more rare than cans, and mallards even more rare. In 22 years hunting coastal AL, I shot a grand total of 2 mallards.
 
Carl your right, I would definitely go to the Texas coast to shoot a mac daddy canvas back. I've hunted ducks since I was 9 with my dad on the south shore I've Long Island. But the 1st drake canvasback I shot was on Keith's Lake, Sabine Pass Texas. That was 40 years ago. I can still remember how he came through the decoys and started back peddling with sun shining off his rusty colored head. At the time he was a 100 point duck. I was finished for the day. Here's a pic of a diver hunt in ND this season.View attachment KIMG0673.JPG
 
John, That's my kind of hunt!!

I see you tried to hide that park duck under the pinner....
 
This was a good story, Todd. Thanks. I sure liked what everyone had to say, plus some included some great pictures to go with what they said. Great post.
Al

I have only taken one canvasback in my life and boy was it memorable. It was back in the 50s where my buddy and I decided to hunt some divers at a spot that offered some good shooting at bluebills, redheads and cans. On that morning I had a small flock of canvasbacks coming at me and offering what every redblooded American duck hunter would consider some great shooting. They came by me in single file. The first 6 were bull cans followed by #7 which was a hen. I pulled on the first drake, gave him what I thought was a good lead and pulled the trigger on my 1956 Belgium A-5 three inch magnum. To my horror I nailed the hen canvasback. Yes, I ate a piece of humble pie during that moment. It was then that I dashed out across the plowed field and picked up this beautiful hen. I knew that it was best to shoot drakes but quickly learned what I didn't know about how quickly a flock of 7 cans, who were on a mission, can get with the program.
 
Don't know what caused the change but we started getting a lot more cans in the central valley of CA a few years ago. They are almost a given on my club all through November. Many days it would be no problem to shoot 15 of them/person.

I have a cool video from the blind, is there a way to post a it?

View attachment IMG_9116.MOV
 
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