Recent

Check Out Our Forum Tab!

Click On The "Forum" Tab Under The Logo For More Content!
If you are using your phone, click on the menu, then select forum. Make sure you refresh the page!

The views of the poster, may not be the views of the website of "Minnesota Outdoorsman" therefore we are not liable for what our members post, they are solely responsible for what they post. They agreed to a user agreement when signing up to MNO.

Author Topic: Duck hunting tips  (Read 1549 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Realtree

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 2921
  • Karma: +3/-0
  • MNO Member #128
    • The "20" Rifle & Pistol Club and Straight River Archery Club
Some great tips from REEDS:

When duck season opens in early October in Minnesota, hunting is primarily centered on the local populations of birds. Smaller lakes and sloughs will see most of the action. Medium sized spreads of decoys can be used to attract these local puddle ducks. Two to five dozen decoys will work well for this type of hunting. While the birds will usually be a mixed bag of mallards, widgeons, teal, wood ducks and other species, standard mallard decoys will get the job done. However, a few other decoys added to your spread will give it variety. For many of the larger sloughs and lakes a duck boat is a necessity and a blind such as does an effective job of camouflaging the boat and hunters.
       
When bluebird conditions are prevalent, jumpshooting will be a more effective tactic after the early morning period. Many hunters do not rely on this tactic as much as they should, but under clear sky conditions, jumpshooting will provide a limit when other methods fail.
       
Later in the fall, when weather starts to push the northern flight of birds down, Minnesota's big lakes will see huge flocks of diver ducks. Bluebills and goldeneyes will make up the majority of these birds. Lakes such as Leech and Winnie will attract many birds, but other lakes throughout the north will host groups of birds as well. When hunting these late season diver ducks, larger spreads of decoys are a must. Spreads of 50-150 decoys work best, with more decoys being preferred. Safety in numbers is especially true when hunting divers, which is why large spreads of decoys are the most effective. Scouting the day before the hunt is an excellent idea to determine which area the birds are using.
       
Which ammunition one chooses for the hunt is an important consideration. Keep in mind that steel weighs less than lead or tungsten so adjust your choice of shot size selection accordingly. For birds over decoys, 12 ga. 3" loads of 2 or 3 shot are preferred. For longer-range situations such as pass shooting, one may want to consider using the 12 ga. 3-1/2 loads of 1 or 2 shot. These loads will deliver better knockdown power. For hunters that want the performance of lead shot or have an old favorite shotgun that won't handle steel, tungsten loads will work.
« Last Edit: August 08/19/07, 09:26:26 AM by Outdoors_Realtree »
The "20" Rifle & Pistol Club-Board Member
Straight River Archery Club-Board Member
Youth Archery Instructor
Archery enthusiast
Deer hunter
Coyote eradicator
Bow-fishing freshman