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Maurapas wma

Posted on 10/19/14 at 7:19 pm
Posted by GEAUXLPOST
Member since Sep 2012
1332 posts
Posted on 10/19/14 at 7:19 pm
Anyone willing to give me any information on access to certain wmas? I was driving on hwy 61 today and was wondering if there was any access to maurapas wma from 61, either by boat or foot.

I'm looking to get into deer hunting for the first time.

If email would be better
<<<<< @hotmail.com

Thanks guys.
Posted by farad
non-entity of St George
Member since Dec 2013
9630 posts
Posted on 10/19/14 at 7:24 pm to
Reserve canal...
Posted by PaBon
UPT 17th W/D
Member since Sep 2014
1890 posts
Posted on 10/19/14 at 7:39 pm to


LDWF has a PDF of the WMA. If it didn't post above, it's on the website. I'm curious as well. It looks massive.
This post was edited on 10/19/14 at 7:40 pm
Posted by Spankum
Miss-sippi
Member since Jan 2007
55990 posts
Posted on 10/19/14 at 7:41 pm to
you can get all of that kind of info from LDWF website...the maps are kinda cryptic though and you need to allow some time to scout the place...
Posted by Slickback
Deer Stand
Member since Mar 2008
27679 posts
Posted on 10/19/14 at 7:50 pm to
Look on WLF website for the map. Good luck. That's a hell of a place to start deer hunting - very tough hunting
Posted by farad
non-entity of St George
Member since Dec 2013
9630 posts
Posted on 10/19/14 at 8:03 pm to
Posted by Boats n Hose
NOLA
Member since Apr 2011
37248 posts
Posted on 10/19/14 at 8:13 pm to
Blind river, reserve canal. Lots of water access. Lots of small canals you can get around in. On foot off of 641 and maybe a few other places. No parking along interstate anymore.

Regardless of your route of entry it's a clusterfrick of a swamp and you'll never get as far in there as you think you will when looking at a map. Hip boots are a necessity.
Posted by mooseofterror
USA
Member since Dec 2012
1338 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 8:01 am to
St James Boat Club on Hwy 61 between Sorrento and Gramercy. Canal Bank boat launch at hwy 22 and diversion canal. No matter where you access the WMA, don't forget to fill out a self clearing permit at one of the check stations. There are check stations at both boat launches and another at the corner of Petit Amite and New River. There are others, but that's the area I hunt so that's what I use... I wear hip boots, but have hunted there for 25 years. If you never tromped the swamp then waders might be better. You can bring a bunch of toys with you, but always bring water and a compass.
Posted by Evergreenie
New Orleans
Member since Mar 2005
147 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 10:15 am to
Any turkeys in there, as in the actual bird kind?
i have a boat with a mud motor.
Posted by GEAUXLPOST
Member since Sep 2012
1332 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 10:21 am to
Thanks. I may go do some exploring in there one day. Looks like nice area.
Posted by mooseofterror
USA
Member since Dec 2012
1338 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 10:24 am to
Not saying they aren't there, but not in the area that I hunt. I've heard others talk about turkeys being there around hwy641, but never seen them myself. not much high ground, some spoil banks, few natural ridges, mostly thigh-waist deep swamp with hidden holes entering the abyss.
Posted by TigerTreyjpg
Monroe, LA
Member since Jun 2008
5815 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 2:11 pm to
For the younger members on this board (I'm 48, so Ima say "young" is 33 and below), do this please.

Close your eyes. Picture pulling your truck off I 10, right around the st james / St. John line, close to garyville canal. It's about 5:30 am, early December, 1982. In the back of your truck are two pirogues. You untie yours, throw a sack of 20 decoys into it, and grab your Browning sweet 16, with those lead, red, Winchester shells, #6s, check your neck for your duck calls, put on your hip boots, and ease that loaded pirogue off of "the swamp bank", which is the side of I 10. Your buddy does the same with his pirogue, save the decoys. Since yAll are 16, yAll likely forgot the flash light, but it doesn't matter much. It's a clear night, and you know all your going to do is paddle or pole far enough away from I 10 such that you can't hear the cars, or see their lights. Eyes still closed?

Initially, you have no choice on where to paddle. You just go where the terrain lets you, as the first 40 or 50 yards are brushy, viney, and have little blobs of land here and there. Your buddy follows right along. Eventually though, you clear that brush, and you find yourself in the midst of this huge cypress and tupelo swamp. The water is clear as gin, and there's nothing floating on it, except maybe a little duck seed, the occasional cypress or Tupelo ball, and maybe a few of those really small, bitter pecAns. You're hearing the constant din of crying nutrias, an occasional owl hoot, and a woody cry or two. As the roar of cars gets quieter, the nutrias get louder. You run several off their log, and sometimes it scares the shite out of you.

You're continually scanning the heavens while paddling, and also looking in front of you, in search of two converging features ....a "hole" in the sky, illuminated by all those stars- the bigger the better - and an "island", which isn't really an island. It's more of a groups of cypress trees that are old, big, and close enough such that they provide a good place to sit on a bucket that you likely forgot, or stand. The "island" needs to be on the edge of the hole. Keep them closed......

You pitch those 20 plugs into the middle of that hole, and tie a jerk string around two, running those strings back to the island. You don't worry about making a "j" with the plugs, as field and stream suggested. They are just out there. About 6:00, the decoys are out, the jerk strings are tested, and they do in fact make a nice ripple, which you HAVE to have. The wind never makes it down there.

You check your call by hitting about 5 good notes, and that's followed by the sound of the unscrewing of that magazine cap, and that pencil being jiggled out of the magazine. Then, the same sound 4 times over......super x's being rammed into a magazine, the racking of a shell, and then a fifth sound identical to the first 4. Safeties are checked - you hear that "click clock" - a cup of coffee from a Stanley thermos with no cup goes into an old, swamp rinsed cup that you grabbed from your truck, and you're now ready.

first, it's woodies. And lots of them. And you don't even care, or even look too hard. Those are 70 point ducks, and you can't kill but two. Sometimes, you watch the dispelling of the myth that woodies won't decoy, as a pair or two actually sail into the plugs and lite.

So, you wait, and wonder if this is the day "it ends", but eventually, you hear it, just as you've heard it a hundred times before. Sometimes it comes as a chuckle, and sometimes it's about 4 notes of a distant hen, but nonetheless, you hear it. You perk up, look to where there used to be a big, unimpaired group of stars, and see that flash of white. A jerk or two on the string, and a few quick chop chops, and suddenly, you realize your "frozen"......not moving.......but just listening w-every ounce of your body. What was a whistle turns into a rumble, and 12 fat shapes appear from that not as dark sky. Two Brownings bark 7 times together, and the cursing of your buddies accuracy puts an exclamation point on the fact that there are only 3 dead ducks on the water.

Then, you do it again, and again. A few times, you disregard the point system, justifying by the fact that you fell in last time, and didn't kill a limit. Or the girl down the street let you sneak into her window last Friday night, so you were owed last Saturday's limit.

I didn't know the name of that swamp growing up. I only knew the my buddy - from reserve, and didn't even like to hunt that much - had a grandfather that was a founding member of garyville hunting club, on who's leased land that story happened so many times. We had permission from "gagoo", as he was known. No one even duck hunted in there, except another older member affectionately called "MFer", for his liberal use of the term. All true Cajuns have a nickname, and that was his. The whole crew there chased a small heard of deer around all year long. Killing 10 was a good year. I wasn't a native. I was merely a Metairie transplant to La Place, with very deep north louisiana duck hunting roots, that stumbled upon what I believe was the finest mallard hunting in the world, circa 1980's, and until the salvania got a hold of that place.

Guess you can open your eyes now. I'm in continuing Ed all day today. Thanks for letting me share. If I never live to see it again, I saw it for about 5 years. It was beautiful. And may God damn the giant savania to hell.
Posted by Boats n Hose
NOLA
Member since Apr 2011
37248 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 2:15 pm to
quote:

And may God damn the giant savania to hell

+1
Posted by Hammertime
Will trade dowsing rod for titties
Member since Jan 2012
43030 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 2:25 pm to
quote:

Thanks. I may go do some exploring in there one day. Looks like nice area.
Keep in mind that some swamps aren't that fun to "explore". Yeah it is beautiful and all, but if you don't have much experience walking through a swamp, it won't be fun for long. Another scenario is you walking in until you get tired, and not think about having to walk out. It can be pretty damn exhausting. Getting turned around in there is also pretty fricking easy.


If you go, ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS bring a map and compass. Can't stress that enough
Posted by Boats n Hose
NOLA
Member since Apr 2011
37248 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 2:36 pm to
"Exploring" is best done by small boat back there. You won't accomplish much trying to walk in far and half of the time you'll get 30 yds from the bank of a canal and be over your hip boots. That whole area is best done sticking to roads and waterways that run through it and walking in 50-100yds max from a road/canal and turning back around. Realistically you won't be going much further in that that ever still hunting the place anyway. It's really slow walking.

And absolutely BRING A COMPASS and study the map of the area you want to check out beforehand.
Posted by Evergreenie
New Orleans
Member since Mar 2005
147 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 3:32 pm to
we HAVe to find a way to kil the salvinia. I used to kill mallards in Sherburne when i was in college (early 90s). It was worth the 2.5 hr drive. All you needed was a pair of waders.
Posted by Boats n Hose
NOLA
Member since Apr 2011
37248 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 3:50 pm to
There aren't hardly any holes in the swamp anymore not choked up with it.
Posted by Hammertime
Will trade dowsing rod for titties
Member since Jan 2012
43030 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 4:03 pm to
Can you just wait until it dries up in there, drag it to high ground, and kill it there?
Posted by DownshiftAndFloorIt
Here
Member since Jan 2011
66763 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 4:39 pm to
Not many people are cut out to successfully hunt that stuff.

Remember that how ever far you go in, it's that far to go out, and Lord forbid you actually kill something.
Posted by tenfoe
Member since Jun 2011
6845 posts
Posted on 10/20/14 at 4:45 pm to
quote:

Remember that how ever far you go in, it's that far to go out, and Lord forbid you actually kill something.
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