bob Petritsch
Active member
Bought a Higbee sneak box after last season,, I had a Taylor homemade years ago when I lived in NY. When we shot open water from the Taylor we always towed it with a larger boat and put out a mess of decoys.
Tried to shoot divers from the Higbee and big problem was lack of decoy space. Instead of 90 I am now limited to about 3 dozen. I usually used two long lines of 18 on a line and thought it looked a bit lacking. I used clips for the decoys, 25 feet of line from the anchor to 150 feet of line for the 18 decoys to 25 feet for the aft anchor. Two lines a bit splayed out from the front with a few individuals at the apex. That was for broasbill.
For scoter I settled on three lines of 8 decoys with 4 on each line close at the front then increasing distance as you went back, thought that rig looked good.
The total distance between first and last bird for the scoter rig was 100 feet.
Was wondering who others in the same boat handle the problem of using fewer decoys than you want to. Here in NC the scoter are never in large flocks, compared to Long Island Sound so the fewer decoys may be more natural. I'm thinking for broadbill I might be better off with a small pod and forget about the longer lines?
Any thoughts would be appreciated. I liked keeping the decoys on individual short clips as it made line control and pick up so much easier.
When
Tried to shoot divers from the Higbee and big problem was lack of decoy space. Instead of 90 I am now limited to about 3 dozen. I usually used two long lines of 18 on a line and thought it looked a bit lacking. I used clips for the decoys, 25 feet of line from the anchor to 150 feet of line for the 18 decoys to 25 feet for the aft anchor. Two lines a bit splayed out from the front with a few individuals at the apex. That was for broasbill.
For scoter I settled on three lines of 8 decoys with 4 on each line close at the front then increasing distance as you went back, thought that rig looked good.
The total distance between first and last bird for the scoter rig was 100 feet.
Was wondering who others in the same boat handle the problem of using fewer decoys than you want to. Here in NC the scoter are never in large flocks, compared to Long Island Sound so the fewer decoys may be more natural. I'm thinking for broadbill I might be better off with a small pod and forget about the longer lines?
Any thoughts would be appreciated. I liked keeping the decoys on individual short clips as it made line control and pick up so much easier.
When