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re: Duck migration makes no sense at all...
Posted on 1/26/22 at 7:31 pm to TheGhostOfBigLee
Posted on 1/26/22 at 7:31 pm to TheGhostOfBigLee
If you hunt south of I 10
As the front moves in (wind shifts s/sw to w/nw/n—-hunt hard. Wind blows out the n/nw for more than 12 hours , might as well cook and drink. Wait for the shift back from the sw/s. After 6 hours of a good blow, birds can’t sit on the big water and end up moving back inside.
If we don’t get a lot of cold and ice by 12/10—whatever we have here is what we will all shoot at for the next 45 days absent some generational storm. Birds are settled in at that point and will fluctuate from inside to big water back and forth with the wind.
As the front moves in (wind shifts s/sw to w/nw/n—-hunt hard. Wind blows out the n/nw for more than 12 hours , might as well cook and drink. Wait for the shift back from the sw/s. After 6 hours of a good blow, birds can’t sit on the big water and end up moving back inside.
If we don’t get a lot of cold and ice by 12/10—whatever we have here is what we will all shoot at for the next 45 days absent some generational storm. Birds are settled in at that point and will fluctuate from inside to big water back and forth with the wind.
Posted on 1/26/22 at 7:49 pm to michael corleone
quote:
Birds are settled in at that point and will fluctuate from inside to big water back and forth with the wind.
Too a degree I think this is correct but ducks do some weird shite once they get down here, which is proven by following birds that wear transmitters. For example, in the Delta study on Pintails where a hen Pintail made multiple back to back day trips to feed in sheet water in NE LA but roosted in SW LA.
Posted on 1/26/22 at 8:53 pm to TheGhostOfBigLee
quote:
cold as giraffe pussy
Excellent malaphor
Posted on 1/26/22 at 8:55 pm to michael corleone
quote:What made you choose this date?
If we don’t get a lot of cold and ice by 12/10
Posted on 1/27/22 at 7:34 am to terriblegreen
quote:In a brass bra.
Cold as a witch's titty
Posted on 1/27/22 at 7:47 am to TheGhostOfBigLee
Birds leave / migrate out when they NEED to leave. That generally means they leave when they’re out of food.
If food is still around they won’t head for warmer weather. Evidently, based on the lack of birds down here, they don’t need to come down this far for food.
That’s generally what’s been happening for years.
If food is still around they won’t head for warmer weather. Evidently, based on the lack of birds down here, they don’t need to come down this far for food.
That’s generally what’s been happening for years.
Posted on 1/27/22 at 8:16 am to VernonPLSUfan
quote:
In a brass bra
Doing push-ups in the snow
Posted on 1/27/22 at 9:02 am to SlidellCajun
quote:But obviously not all. I mean we get at least some early/warm weather ducks.
Birds leave / migrate out when they NEED to leave. That generally means they leave when they’re out of food.
Posted on 1/27/22 at 9:14 am to TheGhostOfBigLee
quote:No one does. Duck hunters at an all time low, so much land off limits, so many changes in ag practices and coastal areas. But in 2020 La duck hunters averaged 10 ducks per waterfowl hunter. I dont see anything changing in regard to interest in duck hunting for the positive. Ducks that are here have too many resting spots and feeding spots. The Mississippi flyway still kills twice the number of ducks as any other flyway so I dont see this massive shift in migration that others talk about.
I just don’t get it.
Areas of Texas, Oklahoma, and Kansas that are great now have been great since the 80s for sure as people from here were going there and slaying them then as well. Those big greenhead numbers are nothing new.
I think the migration is still what it was. I see tons of ducks in the air, just as always, they just are heading somewhere in a hurry. I do believe the mallard numbers in the flyway are over estimated. They are just not here.
Posted on 1/27/22 at 9:56 am to MWP
quote:
with a source food source that wasn't covered in snow
If this is accurate then that would hold true for this year. It seems like it has only snowed twice this year so far. It is disappointing to have cold and no snow. The snow at least looks pretty unlike the brown scenery
Posted on 1/27/22 at 12:42 pm to TheGhostOfBigLee
First I would take into consideration that many times, Duck movement is predicated upon weather conditions and changes outside of our region. That makes it tough to evaluate exactly what’s going on
Sure, 40 years ago….20 years ago, we still had some semblance of cold fronts that effected large portions of a flyway, in turn creating movement over a period of several days.
You’re absolutely correct in there being little to no rhyme or reason why sucks act the way they do for the majority of the season these days.
Sure, 40 years ago….20 years ago, we still had some semblance of cold fronts that effected large portions of a flyway, in turn creating movement over a period of several days.
You’re absolutely correct in there being little to no rhyme or reason why sucks act the way they do for the majority of the season these days.
Posted on 1/27/22 at 9:51 pm to geauxbrown
quote:
First I would take into consideration that many times, Duck movement is predicated upon weather conditions and changes outside of our region. That makes it tough to evaluate exactly what’s going on Sure, 40 years ago….20 years ago, we still had some semblance of cold fronts that effected large portions of a flyway, in turn creating movement over a period of several days.
Most species migrate on photoperiods more than weather. Mallards are somewhat weather related
Posted on 1/28/22 at 5:29 am to Midtiger farm
I used to hunt a NWR that did not allow waterfowl hunting. I would start deer hunting the big brakes after Thanksgiving. The Mallards would show up in huge numbers all of a sudden, and it did not seem to be temperature related. I can recall sweating my balls off on the walk back there. As long as the brakes were wet, the ducks would come.
Posted on 1/28/22 at 5:42 am to TheGhostOfBigLee
I have touched the pu$$y of and Eskimo, shoved my foot up a well diggers arse and carressed the tit of a witch but never have I ever reached up and checked a giraffes pu$$y it ws just too high couldn’t reach.
I always thought ducks came down when it got cold but cold is not the only thing or the thing that really pushes them it’s feed and their inability to find unfrozen water. If their is feed or potholes half way down then no need to fly all the way down. Heck some of the gps ducks fly back and forth half way up the flyway during the season.
I always thought ducks came down when it got cold but cold is not the only thing or the thing that really pushes them it’s feed and their inability to find unfrozen water. If their is feed or potholes half way down then no need to fly all the way down. Heck some of the gps ducks fly back and forth half way up the flyway during the season.
Posted on 1/28/22 at 6:13 am to AlxTgr
For all the guys that hunted in the 80s and the 3/30 days, how was the weather pattern then? What in y’all’s opinion made the hunting get better in the 90s? It was right before my hunting time started as kid so I have no recollection.
Posted on 1/28/22 at 6:54 am to headedwest21
quote:
For all the guys that hunted in the 80s and the 3/30 days, how was the weather pattern then? What in y’all’s opinion made the hunting get better in the 90s? It was right before my hunting time started as kid so I have no recollection.
pretty much the same, the hunting was great during the 3/30 days though, things started to crater late 90s early 2000s. and have sped up.
what changed was the end of the drought in the prairie pothole region nothing here. But our exponentially increasingly degraded marsh, increased mechanical traffic, land use practices have all played a part for us in LA.
This week i drove all the way up 71 and 1 I have never seen so few ducks on that route in january. but I have also never seen cane fields north of alexandria
Posted on 1/28/22 at 6:58 am to CypressTrout10
quote:
Just cause it’s cold down here doesn’t mean it was cold enough up north to push birds down
90% of my best hunts in La it wasn't very cold here.
Posted on 1/28/22 at 9:29 am to Midtiger farm
quote:
Most species migrate on photoperiods more than weather. Mallards are somewhat weather related
Yep, mostly Mallards, Canada Geese, and oddly GW Teal (who are really more related to Mallards than the other teal) are weather related waterfowl. I think what we have seen is the evolution of the species that has adapted over time to take advantage of food sources like corn and refuges further up the flyway. If there is food and safety, why should they migrate further South. You have seen this take place with Snow Geese that once fed in the marsh of the LA/TX Gulf Coast that now are short-stopped in rice fields further North, Greater Canada Geese that used to do the same but now are almost extinct on the coast outside some that live on golf courses, and oddly Whitefronts that now follow the Snows and are making more and more stops out West to the TX Panhandle.
Posted on 1/28/22 at 9:36 am to MWP
quote:These things...here, gone, back, gone, look there's a flock of 70!
and oddly GW Teal
Posted on 1/28/22 at 9:47 am to MWP
I have hunted in Louisiana my teen age and young adult years 1990’s though early 2000’s. Shot very little green, mostly greys and teal.
Began hunting North Texas and Southwest Oklahoma in the early 2000’s hard though 2012. Nothing but Green, and odd duck either wigeon, or Pennies…
Took a few years and tried hunting south Louisiana and shot teal, shovelers, greys, specks, and scaup.
Started back in Oklahoma and it’s all leased. Still do well, mainly wigeon, some red heads, greys, occasionally a Penny or green head. What I’ve noticed is in a state I never shot a green wing teal for years… I’ve killed multiple for the past 3 years. Never blue wing. Interesting that you say they travel like green… I can see the correlation. BTW the amount of agriculture there is why they never come south anymore.
Began hunting North Texas and Southwest Oklahoma in the early 2000’s hard though 2012. Nothing but Green, and odd duck either wigeon, or Pennies…
Took a few years and tried hunting south Louisiana and shot teal, shovelers, greys, specks, and scaup.
Started back in Oklahoma and it’s all leased. Still do well, mainly wigeon, some red heads, greys, occasionally a Penny or green head. What I’ve noticed is in a state I never shot a green wing teal for years… I’ve killed multiple for the past 3 years. Never blue wing. Interesting that you say they travel like green… I can see the correlation. BTW the amount of agriculture there is why they never come south anymore.
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