Al Hansen
Well-known member
To clarify, that bang is singular. I happened to see 3 wood ducks yesterday morning and was lucky enough to drop a drake that Habi went out and got for me. So, all in all, it was a most successful opener.
I will never forget last year when there was no water in the Rio Grande at this time and the private ranch I hunt didn't have water until January 4th. So now I am being faced with a whole new set of logistical problems to solve. The Rio Grande is running at over 1,500 cfs but I still can't get to the rio because of all the mud from the torrential rains that we received 7 weeks ago. The areas that I hunt, normally, were washed away by the rio and once I can get to it I'll just have to revise a few things.
The good news is that I got to the ranch channel. (it is a 3 mile ditch that was dug by the Army Corp of Engineers back in 1955} I found a small corridor of dry land that allowed me to drive that one mile with my Mule.
Now to wait for the land to dry out and for the ducks to begin to arrive down here in good numbers. Our temps are still up in the high 70sF so I guess patience is very necessary. As for the good news, there are still over 90 days left in the season.
Al
To think that during last year's season there was no water here until Jan. 4th makes me a pretty lucky duck hunter. That means I'm over 60 days ahead of schedule.
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Every time I see a drake or hen wood duck I am amazed by it sheer beauty. When I was a kid back in the early 1950s exploring the Minnesota River bottoms, on rare occasions I would spot a pair or two of them in the springtime. There weren't many of them at all and to see them was special. I find myself looking at them with that same amount of enthusiasm and wonderment whenever I see them.
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I will never forget last year when there was no water in the Rio Grande at this time and the private ranch I hunt didn't have water until January 4th. So now I am being faced with a whole new set of logistical problems to solve. The Rio Grande is running at over 1,500 cfs but I still can't get to the rio because of all the mud from the torrential rains that we received 7 weeks ago. The areas that I hunt, normally, were washed away by the rio and once I can get to it I'll just have to revise a few things.
The good news is that I got to the ranch channel. (it is a 3 mile ditch that was dug by the Army Corp of Engineers back in 1955} I found a small corridor of dry land that allowed me to drive that one mile with my Mule.
Now to wait for the land to dry out and for the ducks to begin to arrive down here in good numbers. Our temps are still up in the high 70sF so I guess patience is very necessary. As for the good news, there are still over 90 days left in the season.
Al
To think that during last year's season there was no water here until Jan. 4th makes me a pretty lucky duck hunter. That means I'm over 60 days ahead of schedule.
Every time I see a drake or hen wood duck I am amazed by it sheer beauty. When I was a kid back in the early 1950s exploring the Minnesota River bottoms, on rare occasions I would spot a pair or two of them in the springtime. There weren't many of them at all and to see them was special. I find myself looking at them with that same amount of enthusiasm and wonderment whenever I see them.