Western
OK, Northern Kansas Road trip day 2 & 3, Geese
November
13 - 19, 2010
It is amazing what two Texans
can fit on one cart if they try hard enough. Counting my
silhouettes, we had around 150 decoys on this cart.
We put Blaze to work.
She was a sled dog in a former life. We carted decoys over
2 miles.
This was the view Friday
in a field just over from the one we were hunting.
What
proved to be a lucky omen, we had our Turkey Friends near us on
both days.
Two
things noted. On the lake hunt we did, the coots and ducks where
rafting in tight groups. A park ranger said they do that when
the hawks and eagles migrate in. There was an Eagle hounding the
wheat fields too and it seemed the Geese where staying in tight
groups as well as mixing in species. The wind certainly had
something to do with it too.
So
my strategy both days was open letter spreads with snows on the
up wind side of the letter and a transitioned mix into the
Canada decoys. And the decoys grouped very tight rather than in
family groups to mimic as close as we could to what we saw the
day before the first hunt.
This is around half the
decoys on the snow side.
Day one we limited early.
I killed three for three with my #2 hevi reloads from my 10.
First shot was at nosebleed height and surprised me when the
Goose folded even though I called the shot/bird. Steve then
dropped two from the second large flock that tried to land.
Canada limits done all we could hope for were Snows. Snows did
not start flying until after shooting time was over both days.
We could have limited day one on Canadas 5 times over. No other
hunters on the refuge killed Geese either day. But they were not
calling at all as best I could tell. I was calling and I was
calling my heart out.
Sunday
was tougher. No birds working the fields near us. All birds had
to be called from great distance. But we did well on the three
flocks that tried to land on us. I had struggled with my calling
the day before, but this day I was in the zone. We commanded the
field. A final bird just before ending time was a single bird
that had flown by us several times during the morning. It had a
distinct call and was looking for it's lost mate we assumed. I
called it with spaced pleading honks in those final minutes and
brought it into the decoy pocket finally giving Steve a perfect
shot. We called it a mercy killing.
We
had lots of variety in Goose size.
Finished
up the work picking things up and carting out of the field, then
the area Biologist Amber picked us up at the edge of the field
which was nice of her. The final hero picture: