I love duck huntin! Story of my duckless day.

Jon Zuccolo

Active member
Today I slept in until about 6, and then I got up to walk the dog, and have a coffee and a few egg sandwiches and send my wife off to New Brunswick for her weekend girls trip...The house was quiet as she took the dog, and the cat was happy to not be retrieved by the dog. My wife texted me a while later "What are you going to do today?" I wrote back "Duck hunting of course". I guess she was surprised that I was still at home for breakfast on a duck hunting day. When people ask me why I like duck hunting, I usually tell them its cold, everything is wet, the ducks laugh at my decoys, and walking in mud is exhausting, whats not to like about that?

I loaded up the van with my 6 least laughable decoys, some shells and my 20 gauge and the little canoe on top, and headed out.

I stopped by the local DU pond (2 minute drive from my house), and there were already 3 cars in the parking lot and one on the road. They probably didn't get to sleep in like I did :P I had a different idea for today. No ponds, no blinds, and possibly no ducks, but I kept on driving another 2 minutes down the road and stopped where a "river" passes thru a culvert. Before I unloaded any gear, I went back down to the "river" for one last check to see if my canoe would even fit... Just barely :) so I loaded my gear into the canoe and was on the water by 8am! Ankle deep water that is :)

I've looked at this creek before and thought it MIGHT be passable with a bit of rain, or if I was feeling a bit energetic, I could drag the boat thru the woods a bit when needed... My old pokeboat would have been perfect for this, but I have a stubby canoe for that job now, and this was a perfect test for it.

It turned out to be more dragging than paddling, but I took my time, and canoed a bit, and dragged a bit more. Many times, the paddle could reach both banks, and I had many spiders and branches in my boat before 9am. It was exhausting at times, but quite pleasant, and I started thinking that this is my favorite part of hunting.

As the creek started to get deeper I started seeing ducks. I saw MANY wood ducks, but all out of range as they usually saw the front of my canoe coming around the corners before I could see the birds. I also saw a good count of teal and 2 grouse, and got a single shot off on one grouse. Leaves flew from the bush I hit, but no feathers. It would have been nice to get a grouse, it would have been nice if the creek was a bit deeper also :) And as I came around to a rehabilitated riparian zone, I started flushing woodcock. When I got to 7 birds counted, I thought to my self "Wow, my buddy is gonna be so stoked to try his dog out here!"... within another hour or so I lost count but I would guess more than 25 flushed woodcock. I made a few shots, but couldn't quite connect. In that hour, I didn't move very far in the canoe.

Eventually, I realized I was 2/3rds of the way to a private pond, and I didn't want to start running into hunting parties coming up from the pond. So I sat for a while, and took a little break before turning it around and heading back up.

The little canoe has MANY scratches in its new paint and I found a cool spot to hunt on days when I am not feeling lazy :)

Hope everyone else had a good hunt today.
 
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I'm a little... no, a lot envious of all those woodcock flushes. We have very few around here this far west and no season. Someday that pup of yours is going to perfect for these kind of days.

Tim
 
Gotta love little tucked away spots like that. Maybe you should just walk in down to the area where you saw most of the woodies and see whats flying at first light one morning? That or position a gunner down stream next time you decide to paddle I bet he would get really good shooting.
 
Yup, leaving the canoe at home next time, and taking my buddies springer to scare up some woodcock and see if we cant jump a few ducks too.

I'd like to think I would have got a few if I was shooting from my feet, but you never know :)
 
I love the adventure of those half scouting half hunting expeditions. Even if you don't connect, you learn something new for next time! And next tine you'll be better prepared as you'll know what to expect! Also, I love the fact that necessity is the mother of invention!

I once found this great swamp to hunt on public land, with many potholes which I could to, but had no way of crossing the creek, as it was too deep. I was poor, but had access to a friend's jon boat, and I hunted by myself, and it was a pain to carry it 200 yards on a path with thick brush, by myself. I did it about 7-8 times that season, discovered the potholes were filled with ducks of all kinds in the early season, mainly woodies and teal - shot a few, more by luck than skill. Very little in the late season - but it took me a whole season of going there to figure it out!

The following year I hatched a plan to use an extendable ladder stretching almost 20 feet across the creek. it was a bit nerve wracking to cross it carry first decoys, then back again for my gun and bag and the same thing on the way back (in chest waders). But it worked like a charm. best early season EVER!

Eventually, the swamp dried up, and I stopped going there...

Best of luck in PEI!

Anthony
 
Heck, that sounds like a decent day to me.

Nothing like laying in a boat that is beached and a little off kilter. Watching the clouds roll by, snoozing, playing with the dog, or swatting at the bugs.

Be glad you got out.
 
Thank you for reporting your little adventure...as duck season closes in on me out here in the Pacific Northwest with no ability to go (too old,too lame, too poor) stories like yours will help me through the days when cold wind lashes the windows and activates my wind-driven mallard, relegated to the deck (along with my camouflage grass as a kind of wish-I-were-going duck blind). The cacklers go over in vast bunches, crying, but so far none has decoyed to my third-floor old folks' apartment.

For two seasons now I have contented myself (not happily) with authoring my "Duck Hunter Diaries" from my hunting logs of over 50 years. The work is done now so I don't have that to fall back on. The ebook publisher is bringing out the first volume to coincide with this season. My hope is that other waterfowlers find some pleasure in the unvarnished accounts of a guy who never quite got it right but kept trying. In the meantime I will enjoy my fellow fowlers' posts. I may even add some extracts from my logs if I can figure out the technical stuff...partial payback for the pleasure your posts give an old guy. Bill Burkett
 
Hey! Thanks for the reply and the interest in my stories. "The Duck Hunter Diaries" will go up for sale as an ebook from AbsolutelyAmazingebooks.com sometime in the next week or so, according to the publisher. I wanted to use a photo of me on the cover sporting a beard that would qualify me for a walk-on on the Duck Commander show, but the marketing experts said are you serious??? They're still cogitating a cover.
 
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