Rick Kyte
Well-known member
To tell the truth, I wasn't all that excited about the WI opener this season. In several scouting trips the past few weeks, I haven't seen as many birds as usual. And my favorite early season spots were filled in with vegetation due to low water levels through most of the summer.
But how could I face Mickey if I didn't give him a chance to prove himself right out of the blocks in his second season? We've been working the dummies pretty hard for the past 9 months. I could tell he was doing better after a so-so season last year. He made some good retrieves last year, but he was hesitant about jumping out of the boat and didn't like to swim through weeds and muck. He's been doing better with dummies, but there's nothing like the real thing to measure progress.
The only place I had seen a fair number of ducks in the past couple of weeks was on the Minnesota side of Pool 8 on the Upper Mississippi. So that's were we headed at 3:30am Saturday. I had never set up there before, and didn't know how popular it would be, so I got an early start. Turns out I was plenty early; it was another hour before the next boat arrived, but he came straight to the area I had come to, and after that it was one boat after another until the 9am shooting time.
What a morning! The best opener I've had in years, and I knew it was the best even before the first shot was fired. Ducks were everywhere: flocks of mallards setting down on top of us, woodies criss-crossing the marsh in every direction, huge flocks of blue-wings doing their synchonized aerial acrobatics.
And Mickey didn't disappoint. We were set up in some of the nastiest gunk the Mississippi backwaters have to offer, and he marked every bird, charged to the retrieve, and brought every one to hand.
We still have a few things to work on. He didn't hold until released. That wasn't a problem last season, and it generally isn't a problem during training with dummies. But dummies ain't birds, and his heart was pumping this weekend.
He also likes to take his time on retrieves. He'll charge to the bird, but once he gets it he changes to a leisurely pace. Here he is bring back a ring-neck, slowing down to see what the guys across the marsh are calling to.
All in all, a great opener. Lots of ducks, none lost, and a dog that seems to be maturing at the start of his second season.
Rick
But how could I face Mickey if I didn't give him a chance to prove himself right out of the blocks in his second season? We've been working the dummies pretty hard for the past 9 months. I could tell he was doing better after a so-so season last year. He made some good retrieves last year, but he was hesitant about jumping out of the boat and didn't like to swim through weeds and muck. He's been doing better with dummies, but there's nothing like the real thing to measure progress.
The only place I had seen a fair number of ducks in the past couple of weeks was on the Minnesota side of Pool 8 on the Upper Mississippi. So that's were we headed at 3:30am Saturday. I had never set up there before, and didn't know how popular it would be, so I got an early start. Turns out I was plenty early; it was another hour before the next boat arrived, but he came straight to the area I had come to, and after that it was one boat after another until the 9am shooting time.
What a morning! The best opener I've had in years, and I knew it was the best even before the first shot was fired. Ducks were everywhere: flocks of mallards setting down on top of us, woodies criss-crossing the marsh in every direction, huge flocks of blue-wings doing their synchonized aerial acrobatics.
And Mickey didn't disappoint. We were set up in some of the nastiest gunk the Mississippi backwaters have to offer, and he marked every bird, charged to the retrieve, and brought every one to hand.
We still have a few things to work on. He didn't hold until released. That wasn't a problem last season, and it generally isn't a problem during training with dummies. But dummies ain't birds, and his heart was pumping this weekend.
He also likes to take his time on retrieves. He'll charge to the bird, but once he gets it he changes to a leisurely pace. Here he is bring back a ring-neck, slowing down to see what the guys across the marsh are calling to.
All in all, a great opener. Lots of ducks, none lost, and a dog that seems to be maturing at the start of his second season.
Rick