I Am Content With My Fleet, But I Wish I Had Bought....

I'm uncertain if I will continue to be an active duck hunter for a number of reasons.
Eric,
I can relate to what you are saying. I like to have the gear and the boat all in readiness. Not until I get up that morning do I fully commit.
Take away the option of full freedom to come and go as I please, quickly becomes less appealing.
I sat in the turkey woods this morning, left for home when I felt like. Rather than slug it out all day because it was the day I drew in a lottery.
I am back there right now, not because it's prime time (it's not) but because, just because, it's nice being the only one out here.
Guess I've become a grumpy old hermit? 🙃
 
Even with fewer places.to hunt and fewer birds to hunt; I still have to hunt waterfowl. Life is too short not to. With our drought here in the midwest; the last few years have been dismal, but seeing the sunrise come up on a marsh, hearing all of the birds waking up, seeing the mink and muskrat swimming, and being with friends in a duck boat is all worth it. I have been hunting waterfowl for six decades and the goal is to go another 10 years or more
I am fortunate to be just starting out because I don't have high expectations in terms of numbers of ducks killed. As a resident of Minnesota I am afraid the best days are behind us as the flyways have shifted. But there are less duck hunters so the opportunities are there but require more scouting than in years past. Honestly I got into duck hunting because my GWP loves water and it's too exhausting to hunt upland game back to back. Richard
 
RM

I haven't heard of any studies that add credence to flyway shift theories. I think we are dealing with dry prairies, poor habitat, low breeding populations, small fall flights, changed agriculture practices, and an old bird population that knows how to utilize the refuge system and move at night to survive.
 
That's excellent news! So my first duck boat, a Kara Hummer, I made the mistake of putting on a motor. Consequently the best areas were off limits. I am hoping to even the score with the Devlin Poleboat aka rowboat this season. I think alot of birds don't migrate until the season is closed if at all. Richard
 
Larry

Exactly and thank you. The season of life is changing and I'm uncertain if I will continue to be an active duck hunter for a number of reasons. I've hit the point where I question if my time is better off spent on other pursuits. Maybe 43 seasons is enough. I spend a massive amount of time in the off-season on duck hunting things and it just hasn't been worth the effort expended and aggravation these past three or so years. I'll figure it out. A guy could have a lot worse things to deal with in their life so I shouldn't complain. I might anyway :) Life is good. I just may redirect energies in the future. I don't know. I go back and forth. When my fleet goes up for sale you'll know I made a decision.
For what it's worth, not only do seasons change but they also sometimes change back. Put the boats and stuff away for a few years before you decide to rid yourself of them. What re-lights a fire can come out of nowhere, and given how much this passion has obviously meant to you over the years I'd be surprised if it didn't strike again when you least expect it. And I'll bet you'll appreciate having at least some of your past gear when/if it does.
 
For what it's worth, not only do seasons change but they also sometimes change back. Put the boats and stuff away for a few years before you decide to rid yourself of them. What re-lights a fire can come out of nowhere, and given how much this passion has obviously meant to you over the years I'd be surprised if it didn't strike again when you least expect it. And I'll bet you'll appreciate having at least some of your past gear when/if it does.
Grandbabies; teaching them to hunt!
 
Woah,woah, woah, you had a Bluebill? Please elaborate. I am considering it for my next build. I'm aware of only a half dozen or so in existence in scouring the web; not one of Devlin's more popular designs. I would like to power it with a mud motor or an outboard depending on how skinny the water is. Please tell what you liked and didn't like about the design. Richard
Yeah, I’ve had one—actually, I’ve had quite a few boats over the years. At one point, I even had a Devlin Mallard. Like most duck hunters who start out boatless but dream of chasing birds on bigger water, my journey into boat ownership began with necessity and curiosity.


It all kicked off with a DIY project. I bought the plans and built a Kara Hummer, but the smaller version called the “Robber.” It served me well for years—a solid one-man boat that got the job done. But eventually, I wanted something more capable, especially for motors.


That’s when I picked up a used Perche Creek Duck Boat directly from the owner of Perche Creek Boats—not the original designers, but the guy who carried it forward. Funny enough, the original brains behind that design were DuckBoat.net legends Ben Gallop and Ira McCauley. I got the chance to meet both, even spent time chatting boats with Ben at his place about 30 miles from me. He’s built some incredible stuff.


The Perche Creek was a game changer. Lightweight and motor-ready, I threw a 2HP Evinrude on it and hit the water. Then another one came up for sale, and I figured—why not? Two boats meant I could bring a buddy. But that meant I needed a trailer to haul them plus gear. I found a set of torsion axles cheap on eBay and had a buddy weld me a custom double-decker trailer. That setup was slick.


Sometime after, I stumbled on a Devlin Mallard for $600 in Kansas City—no motor but included duck gear. The guy was getting out of the sport, so I snagged it. I ran it a couple of seasons but never really hunted from it. I’d picked up a 1968 20HP Johnson for $100, but the Mallard’s displacement hull wasn’t ideal for the kind of waters I hunt in Missouri—not like the bays where that design shines.


Next came the Blue Bill. Found a good deal in Illinois: boat and trailer for $1000, no motor. I sold the Mallard and mounted my 20HP Johnson on the Blue Bill. That thing was a beauty—perfect for one guy and a dog, with room for everything. A little cramped if you added another hunter and more gear, but manageable.


Then a friend offered me a Four Rivers Refuge Runner for $600, and well, you know how it goes—I bought it. But I was collecting too many marsh boats at that point, so I sold off both Perche Creek boats and the trailer to fund the Refuge Runner and even came out a bit ahead.


Then life took a hard turn—divorce. I had to pay legal fees and help my daughter get a vehicle. So in 2010, I sold everything: the Blue Bill, Johnson, Four Rivers, and my trusty 2HP Evinrude. I was boatless again and pretty much stopped hunting for a few years.


Fast forward a bit, my neighbor held an auction, and I snagged a 14x32 jon boat for $50, thinking maybe I could get back into it. Still needed a motor, though. Eventually, I found a 16' jon, trailer, and a 1996 9.9HP Yamaha for $300. The motor and trailer had titles, but the boat didn’t—so registering it in Missouri was a no-go. Ended up selling the boat to a couple of kids for $200. They wanted to bowfish with it. I kept the trailer and motor.


That 14x32 jon was a bit too narrow for stability, so the search continued. I started looking again for a Perche Creek Duck Boat. I always liked those—lightweight, easy to hide, and already set up for a small motor. Found one and bought it. Then started looking for another 2HP Evinrude to pair with it—found one of those too.


Around the same time, I picked up a 14x36 jon someone was selling. So now I’m back in action: two jons (14x32 and 14x36), a Perche Creek Duck Boat, a 9.9 Yamaha, and a 2HP Evinrude. Full circle.




As for the Blue Bill—it’s an excellent one-man rig, especially if you’re on the bigger side. Just a little tight when you throw in a second hunter and a dog. Looking back, I think a Devlin Black Brant III would’ve been the perfect boat for me—plenty of room and better suited to the kind of hunting I do. I could never find one for sale, and I didn’t have the space or tools to build one myself.


I also really liked the Devlin Broadbill for solo hunts. I got to motor around in one once—stable and fast. Great boat.


So, who knows… maybe this journey isn’t over yet. Or maybe, like a few others I know, I’m heading toward the end of my duck hunting chapter and it’s time to move on. We’ll see.
 
I've always wanted a Barnegat sneak...totally impractical for Arkansas as there aren't many places to use it, but I love that it is kind of the ultimate purpose-built boat. The fiberglass wouldn't do well in the flooded timber and cypress knees, but using it on some of the rivers and a few other places would be the nuts.

Want an Alumacraft Ducker, too...just seemed like a neat way to go, even though I've heard from so many people that they are noisy, don't track well, and cold.
 
Rick

You'd be the talk of the town for sailing a Barnegat around Bayou Meto during duck season.
I had an aluminum homebuilt skiff of sorts that I pushpoled around the Raft Creek WMA when it first opened. The first spot I drew felt like a mile of poling, and I was stripped to the waist, only my t-shirt on by the time I was about halfway, and it was in the low 40's. There were people on one of the Arkansas hunting sites that knew me for a while because word got around. I eventually got a cheap transom mount trolling motor, and that made the ride a lot nicer.

But yes, sailing a Barnegat down the ditch at Lower Vallier would definitely cause a stir. it's almost worth doing just because...
 
Through the past 25 years I've had Carsten boats of all shapes and sizes, Momarsh boats, not one but two Four Rivers Refuge boats, two Fiber dome boats, two Aqua Pods, kayaks, canoes. Yes, my name is Ed and I have an addiction! Did I mention I bought another Grumman 12' V bottom after this past season? It's funny how when I think about the past 25 years since moving home and how many miles I've traveled with boat in tow, I literally have shot more ducks and geese 400 yds from my house in a kayak, canoe or my last 12' boat. Like Huntindave said, I find myself committing to hunt when I wake up. I'm finding at my age having a boat on the bank with a trolling motor and a half dozen duck decoys and a few geese floaters makes that commitment so much easier. 5 months until my season starts!
 
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