Dani
Appreciate your response. In it I see a mixture of indicators the rules have, in part, lessened your duck hunting activity. Perhaps too age factors in and the energy required isn't there over or on top of competing interests. That does apply to me in some manner, plus I now have some private opportunity, for the moment. Your statement, "But the limit on what days you can hunt ducks makes it hard for me to just want to go do a quick afternoon hunt." is something I too have experienced and have never gotten over my resentment of the state for doing that. Weekday closure regs knocked me out of a significant portion of my season hunting totals due to not wanting to mess with public weekend crowds. Our state sponsored a graduate level research MS thesis of the impacts the weekday closure had on waterfowl usage of the closed areas and learned there was no waterfowl usage increase on the closed days over the open days. Yet the weekday closure rules are locked in place. Now on the largest WMA they are going to quota/draw hunts. You clearly stated quota hunt rules did away with first-come-first-serve and that is the path my state is now on. It is a terrible management scheme in my opinion.
I'm realistic and know as I head into the home stretch of my duck hunting hobby my public days are largely behind me. I'm not as concerned for me as I am my son, his peers, and future generations. There is no doubt in my mind you greatly damage the discovery and adventure aspects of duck hunting when you tell public hunters when and where they can hunt. Freedom to pursue makes the sport attractive to young men and women. "What's around the bend" primal urge is huge in the development of a passionate duck hunter and is being squashed. Without that spirit alive in a waterfowler the new rules create a generation of cattle-like hunters, going where they are told when they are told. You can hunt this spot on Dec x. Hope you get lucky. They are amputating the spirit of the freelance hunter and that spirit is what keeps someone in the sport. You will not retain hunters through lines and lotteries when careers, kids, adult responsibilities enter the equation. Loss of freedom to scout and move and hunt where you saw them the day before will always be better than a random number generator that picks you, or doesn't. Effort, skill, risk, and their payoff just took a backseat to regulations. The new management philosophies discourage the hunter, sending them to less aggravating pursuits. State agencies, notably Ark, KS, ND, SD, MB, etc., have put us on the path of fewer hunters, and with them go influence over conservation matters that waterfowl populations desperately need. Our state agencies are damaging the very resource they are supposed to protect.