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Indiana Duck Hunting Report Archive

Posted By:
TRM
Web Member

09-02-2010 20:47
– – –
Shot some doves today scratched that trigger finger itch. had my 15 by 420. was on track to do it in one box, but ended up just under 2 full boxes. Had a couple brain cramps.

Posted By:
Corey-Cordray
Guest

South Zone 09-01-2010 17:24
Sunny & Clear, Winds Calm – Over 70 Degrees
Not a bad way to start the year. Managed to kill seven honkers and have three of them be banded. Birds didn’t really like us until about 10:30 or so. I think we’ll try it again on Saturday.

Posted By:
Wild Bill
Guest

Local corn field 09-01-2010 10:28
Mostly Sunny, No Precipitation – Over 70 Degrees
Ok I’ll let you know how the “Texas Dove Loads” do. Shot my 15 doves in 45 min this am. Shot 32 times. I made a good choice on these loads. You need to try them!

Posted By:
Wild Bill
Guest

08-12-2010 21:01
– – –
Can anyone give me any personal reviews on the shot shell “Texas Dove Load” I just ordered a case and hope I didn’t make a mistake!

Posted By:
Wild Bill
Guest

08-12-2010 21:01
– – –
Can anyone give me any personal reviews on the shot shell “Texas Dove Load” I just ordered a case and hope I didn’t make a mistake!

Posted By:
Wild Bill
Guest

08-12-2010 20:59
– – Over 70 Degrees
Does anyone know any late info on the new lake that was proposed for Sullivan CO.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

More Great News 06-21-2010 22:09
– – –
SCOTTSBURG, Ind. — A wide swath of Muscatatuck River bottoms stretching across three Southern Indiana counties and 45,600 acres will be preserved for wildlife and opened for hunting, fishing and hiking under an ambitious project Gov. Mitch Daniels announced Friday.

The Indiana Department of Natural Resources will immediately begin acquiring the land from willing sellers with the goal of protecting habitat for amphibians, reptiles and waterfowl as well as enhancing flood control in the region and bolstering the state’s hardwood forests.
The project will “create one of the state’s largest complexes of both upland and lowland forest, attracting abundant waterfowl and migratory songbirds,” said Mary McConnell, state director of The Nature Conservancy, who attended the announcement at the Hardy Lake State Recreation Area in Scott County.
“This is an incredibly, incredibly significant property,” she said.
Much of the land should be acquired in the next two years using $21.5 million from hunting and fishing license fees and $10 million from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, DNR officials said. But no landowner will be required to sell.
Daniels said the project was one of “lasting and large importance” in Indiana and continues his administration’s “record” pace of land conservation.
In fact, the Daniels’ visit to Hardy Lake came just one day after the governor announced in Terre Haute that the state would begin acquiring 43,000 acres of land located along 94 miles of the Wabash River and Sugar Creek in west central Indiana.
That project is expected to be the largest conservation project in Indiana history. The Muscatatuck Bottoms project would be the second largest.
It will essentially link two divergent sections of the Jackson-Washington State Forest. McConnell said it will also serve as the hub of a wheel whose spokes include Spring Mill State Park, the Hardy Lake State Recreation Area and other state and federal properties.
Friday’s announcement took place at Hardy Lake, where conservation officers, wildlife advocates and lawmakers gathered to applaud the project.

“This is one of those opportunities of a decade,” said John Goss, executive director of the Indiana Wildlife Federation and a former state DNR director.

In all, the project will include land in Scott, Washington and Jackson counties that is largely undeveloped forest and home to several species that state officials said are endangered or threatened, including birds such as the yellow-crowned night heron, least bittern, red-shouldered hawk and Cerulean warbler.
Two state-endangered reptiles — the Kirtland’s snake and copperbelly watersnake — also are found along the Muscatatuck forests as well as the featherfoil, a state-endangered plant. The forest is characterized by several species of oak, hickory and sweet gum.
Although much of the land has been undisturbed, the state will undertake some restoration efforts to turn farmland back into forests, said Mark Reiter, director of the DNR’s division of fish and wildlife. That includes replanting the hardwood trees that are native to the region.
Scottsburg Mayor Bill Graham said Friday he is pleased the state won’t use eminent domain to take any land and he believes most property owners will sell willingly.
He thinks the resulting recreation area will be a boon to the region’s economic development efforts and Graham told the governor he’d start working on the tourism plan immediately. He pointed on a map where Scottsburg already has a trail system close to the proposed recreation area and said the city will consider expanding it into the space.
Graham acknowledged that the project will take some land off the property tax rolls but he said the “benefits far outweigh any costs.”
A few of the tracts in the proposed recreation area already are owned by the state and some by The Nature Conservancy, which recently spent about $1.5 million buying more than 1,000 acres in the area.
Reiter said the group will likely sell that property to the state at a discount and could help with the purchase of additional parcels. The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service and Ducks Unlimited are also expected to help with the project.
“I have goose bumps today just thinking about what we’re doing,” said state Rep. Terry Goodin, D-Crothersville, whose district includes much of the Muscatatuck Bottoms property. “As development continues over the next 50 or 75 or 100 years, people are going to look back at this move — at all this preserved land — and think that it was an awesome idea.”

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Great news for IN 06-11-2010 15:33
– – –
Groundbreaking wetland initiative seeks to encompass 43,000 acres
Spans four counties, 94 river miles of Sugar Creek, Wabash River

TERRE HAUTE — Indiana is making plans to acquire up to 43,000 acres along the Wabash River and Sugar Creek floodplain in west-central Indiana, part of an unprecedented land conservation/

wetlands project that will benefit wildlife, public recreation and the environment.

Gov. Mitch Daniels announced the initiative Thursday at The Landing. He spoke outdoors, with the Wabash River flowing in the background.

The area involved, which follows 94 river miles along the Wabash River, stretches across four counties from Shades State Park to Fairbanks Landing Fish & Wildlife Area in Sullivan County.

The planned Wabash River wetlands area is expected to be larger than the combined size of the Morgan-Monroe State Forest and Brown County State Park.

“It will be one continuous wildlife habitat, one of the largest in the eastern United States,” Daniels said. His comments drew applause from the large crowd.

The project, which includes two separate habitat areas, is the largest ever undertaken by the Department of Natural Resources. Daniels will announce the second part of the project, located in southeastern Indiana, today.

Daniels said the goal is to make Indiana a national leader in wetlands and wildlife protection. “Coupled with Goose Pond [in Greene County], our experts believe that the new, 94-mile continuous Wabash River habitat will become one of the major Eastern U.S. waterfowl destinations and a tourist destination along with it,” he said.

The state will use $21.5 million from the Lifetime License Trust Fund, a state trust fund dedicated to conservation purposes, and $10 million from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service to begin the acquisitions. That investment will leverage millions of dollars in additional private and federal funding for both the protection and restoration of the corridor.

The Lifetime License Trust Fund contains revenue from the sale of lifetime fishing, hunting and trapping licenses. No state tax dollars are involved.

Additional support will come from The Nature Conservancy, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service and Ducks Unlimited, a national conservation group based in Memphis, Tenn.

Mary McConnell, Indiana state director for the Nature Conservancy, described the project as “the most amazing and perhaps the most significant investment in conservation in a generation in Indiana. It’s exactly the kind of project that we should be working on as a state,” she said.

The Wabash corridor has long been a priority for the nature conservancy, she said. The Wabash is “Indiana’s river,” she said. It is 475 miles long and one of the most biologically diverse rivers in the country, she said.

The DNR will work to acquire land in the area from willing sellers, building upon the recent excitement regarding the Wabashiki Fish & Wildlife Area, a proposed 7,000-acre project along the Wabash River in West Terre Haute.

McConnell credited local partners involved with the Wabashiki project as being a catalyst for the larger project announced Thursday. “It’s the local partners here that have had a vision from the very beginning,” she said, naming John Mutchner, Keith Ruble and Max Miller. She also referred to Wabash River Development and Beautification Inc., Riverscape and the Vigo County Parks and Recreation Department.

After the governor’s announcement, Miller said the wetlands project will have a major impact not only on wildlife and waterfowl, but on the local economy as well. “We [Terre Haute] are the central city of this project,” he said.

Miller described it as a “once-in-a-lifetime chance” to use a dedicated state trust fund, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service funds and other private funding to create the Wabash River wetlands corridor. “I think it’s a legacy that he [Daniels] has put together,” Miller said.

Miller said he may not be around when the project is completed, but “it’s for my grandkids. It’s for the future.”

Robert D. Hoffman, director of Ducks Unlimited for the Great Lakes/Atlantic Regional office, said during the news conference, “This is unprecedented for a state to be developing a corridor … with this many acres.” He described it as an “amazing” initiative

“We should all be very, very proud of what’s going on here,” Hoffman said.

Ducks, geese and other waterfowl that migrate from the Arctic and Canada down through the United States to Mexico will find more and better habitat in Indiana, he said. It will change local migration patterns of waterfowl in this portion of the Mississippi Flyway.

“This is fantastic news” for waterfowl enthusiasts in Indiana, Hoffman said.

While the project could take several years, Daniels said it’s the state’s goal “to make this real as fast as it can practically be done.”

He thanked private and public groups who came together “to do something I hope generations of Hoosiers will look back and be grateful for and enjoy.”

In an interview, Daniels said he believes the Wabash River wetlands project will eventually become known nationally as a wildlife habitat, drawing tourists and outdoor recreation enthusiasts. He also hopes it means a boost to the Terre Haute economy.

The project also will bring significant flood control advantages, the governor said, one reason the federal government is participating.

It will involve purchase of property that can be adversely impacted by flooding, including farmland.

As the project develops, the goal will be to provide plenty of public access for fishing and other outdoor recreational activities, said Nick Heinzelman, DNR director of land acquisition. The state’s goal is “to try to connect the bigger parcels we already own into a continual habitat corridor down the river.”

The property will be acquired from “willing sellers, something that will take time,” Heinzelman said. Some people will be ready to sell their floodplain property immediately, while others may want to wait a few years. Some people may not sell at all.

The overall Wabash project eventually will be six times larger than the 8,000-acre Goose Pond Fish & Wildlife Area, which was purchased in 2006.

Other key objectives of the initiative are to protect habitat for threatened and endangered species; preserve significant rest areas for migratory birds, especially waterfowl, and to create a regionally significant conservation destination.

Terre Haute Mayor Duke Bennett said the Wabash River wetlands project represents “a once-in-a lifetime project. You don’t have many things that are this large in scale. Terre Haute sits right in the heart of it. We all stand to benefit from this state project.”

Posted By:
Wild Bill
Guest

Sullivan County 02-16-2010 08:47
Sunny & Clear, Winds Calm – 10-20 Degrees – Open Water
Hunted Sat to watch the birds go out to feed then come back in 15 min after shooting hr. My question – why don’t they open the whole state up for the 15 day season?

Posted By:
kayakis
Web Member

elkhart co. feb goose hunt 02-15-2010 19:39
– – –
well had the best hunt of this late season today.shot 1 goose on the river in the morning… then hunted our regular field in the afternoon finished off with 4 more birds for my 5 bird limit. for the 3 of us in the late season jimmy 7 adam 4 tim 5 ………..

Indiana Duck Hunting Report Archive

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 02-06-2010 17:40
Arctic Blast – 25-30 Degrees – Open Water
We set up for geese this morning expecting big things. The wind whipped in every possible way. We had blowing snow that tortured us along with it. We ended up with four geese. Our set up was terrible and we moved around several times. I’m not sure how much it would have mattered though. They simply, for the most part, were in loafing mode. We had a good time though.

I’ve enjoyed the time spent here this season. Hopefully you enjoyed my posts. More to come next season. It’s off season time now.

Posted By:
kayakis
Web Member

elkhart co. feb goose hunt 02-03-2010 19:07
– – –
well I stayed home today Tim hunted the field by him self he shot 3 geese today guess i’ll be out in the morning…..jimmy

Posted By:
kayakis
Web Member

elkhart co. feb goose hunt 02-02-2010 20:03
– – –
monday Tim and I shot 2 geese tuesday we shot only 1 ….. drove out of the field with the decoys geese landed in the field as we were leaving….jimmy

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 01-31-2010 18:10
Sunny & Clear, Morning Fog – 0-10 Degrees – Ice
We expected to be able to get the boat in the creek this morning with the river being open. It wasn’t so. We piled into my truck, got some coffee, and then drove around looking for jump shooting opportunities. We had just a few. None turned out, though we did get a cripple Randy shot yesterday afternoon. We then parted ways expecting to not hunt anymore until next weekend. I drove up around the area around two found some birds. We flushed them but never got a shot. The second spot was workable though. We ended up with two geese and called it a season for the Ohio River Zone.

One more shot around Indy on Saturday, We hope to end it with a bang.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 01-23-2010 15:00
Mostly Cloudy, No Precipitation – 40-45 Degrees
We set up in a little slough this morning. We only saw 2 ducks but on the way out a dozen came in.

I went to snag up the decoys in the river bottoms mid morning. Found seventy mallards using the slough. I then moved to another slough to get the rest of the decoys and jumped up a dozen walking in. I decided to hunt for a while. Two ducks gave me a look but were very wary. I worked them for around fifteen minutes to no avail.

Might chase them in the morning. I’m tired.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 01-17-2010 18:11
Mostly Cloudy, No Precipitation – 45-50 Degrees
We set up for geese yesterday afternoon. We busted four, one of which was banded.

Hunted the river briefly this morning in the rain. We saw four (expletive) ducks. Pathetic.

Off until next weekend. There simply isn’t much here.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 01-16-2010 14:26
Mostly Cloudy, No Precipitation – 40-45 Degrees
We set up in a creek off the river this morning. I had to walk across ice about an inch thick to throw the decoys out (shin to quad deep water). We threw out five mallard decoys and a jerk string deke. We set our layout blinds along some vegetation along the bank and set up. There have been ducks using this hole all this past week. Two showed up this morning. Two gadwall came right in. We got up and shot. I dropped a drake and the other got out. We also had a mallard land and jump up on the ice. I took a shot through some brush and missed. That was it. We did see some ducks around and a ton of geese. Back at it tomorrow, rain or shine.

Season Counts
Ducks- 152 (Randy, Marty and others got mallard limits Thursday)
Geeese- 68

[Edited By Bert Holtzman on 2010-01-16 18:53]

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River 01-11-2010 17:59
Cloudy, Snow Flurries – 25-30 Degrees – Open Water
Goose and I hunted the river this afternoon. We got set up around one and waited in the snow. While I was setting up I did have two ducks drop into the creek. They quickly got out and I didn’t see more than pairs here and there the whole hunt. Goose did well and sat patiently. I think we both got cold. Birds either left or sat. I’d probably guess the later.

[Edited By Bert Holtzman on 2010-01-11 18:15]

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 01-10-2010 18:07
Cloudy, Winds Calm – 10-20 Degrees – Open Water
We set up in the creek this morning for a quick duck hunt. It was over really quick. Marty and I scratched out six and Randy and Scooter got five. They came in and quit flying early true to form.

From there we moved to the corn field. We set up quickly and birds started passing through immediately. We worked close to two hundred birds the first hour. None got close enough and they flared just about every time. We moved the decoys and threw more snow on our blinds. Then we hit a lull. After an hour so they started flying again. We got three birds in the first group. We then called in 20 and shot at 20 yards out. Five birds were hit. We got four. Marty chased two down and worked hard to get one. The other one got away. We worked more birds hoping for that last one but never got it. We did, however, call in four ducks, taking two.

Ended the day with 13 ducks and 7 geese. It was a really fun day. No school tomorrow. I’m going to set up on the river in the morning for a solo hunt with Goose.

Season Count
Ducks- 133.
Geese-(add three I missed from a hunt I didn’t go on) 68.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River 01-09-2010 12:52
Cloudy, Snow Flurries – 10-20 Degrees – Open Water
I woke up early this morning to seal our spot on the river (I knew we would have competition). Got into the truck around 4:30 and headed out, stopping for breakfast on the way. Pulled up on camp right at 5 and started to set up. Around 5:15 I saw flashlights 75 yards down the creek (I was set up on the mouth). I had half the decoys out and proceeded to continue. Randy, Marty and Tony showed up at 6 and we waited for shooting light. Ducks started to fly a little after and we worked a pair, which swung over the creek to set up for us. The party down the creek ended up with them. When they shot about 20 ducks got up between us. The boys shot and missed. My gun didn’t shoot. Seems I didn’t wipe it down good enough last night. It was froze. After that we had a gadwall come in cupped up right where we wanted it. Tony made quick work of her. Soon after that we had a mallard do the same. Randy took care of him. That was it. We worked one more group of birds.

Talked to one of the guys who set up from us. He said there’s been some success but not much around here. They never did find their duck. We had our eyes on it until the gadwall came in. Both parties wondered when the twenty that flushed out came from. We sure didn’t see them. If they were roosted they must have really wanted in there. Weird stuff for a weird season. It continues tomorrow around Indy! We’re giving it one more shot up there before the south zone closes out.

Indiana Duck Hunting Report Archive

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 01-08-2010 15:03
Cloudy, Snow Flurries – 0-10 Degrees – Open Water
Randy, Tony and Marty got 11 ducks and a goose this morning.

Season Totals

120 ducks
57 geese

Birds in the Ohio River Zone around here are becoming more numerous. However, most of the activity is occuring in the afternoon on the river in general. Ducks have been sitting in the mornings and feeding in the afternoon. I witnessed a massive mallard stage yesterday afternoon on the river. They sat down for a while then poured into as KY cornfield.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River 01-07-2010 11:18
Cloudy, Accumulating Snow – 25-30 Degrees – Ice
I scouted Monday and saw about a thousand birds in a time period of 30 minutes and was feeling pretty confident about getting out on the river this morning. Randy, Tony, and I threw out our decoys on the mouth of a creek and got ready. We didn’t see much at day break. Two gadwall came in and one left, though it was hit. Those were the only two ducks we saw. Unbelievable. Birds are here on day and gone the next. The boys are heading to Indy tomorrow. I’ll be sleeping in and watching Lexi. I’m sure we’ll both have another snow day!

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 01-02-2010 19:16
Sunny & Clear, Winds Calm – 10-20 Degrees – Ice
We set up on the lake again this morning. It was mostly open water when I trotted in to set the decoys out. By the time I was done with the chore, and adjustments, it seemed to start to ice in immediately. Nonetheless, after a half-hour wait until shooting time, we did have at least some open water. Unfortunately none of the ducks we saw wanted anything to do with it. After an hour or so of freezing our tails off, Randy decided to make a run to the lower end of the lake. I volunteered to tag along, much to his dismay! Upon arrival we noticed a stack of ducks and geese lounging in the open water. They jumped up and we sat waiting for some to return. One did, out of range. We decided to head back to the crew soon thereafter and made our way back in the Ranger. When we got back ducks and geese started to fly. We invited them in to our decoys. Four geese accepted the invitation. We got three but lost one to the ice. Goose did a good job on getting two. We decided it wasn’t worth sending him for the third, which was a good ways out huddled dead on the ice.

Our next target was the cornfield we took limits of geese in earlier this week. We stopped to get something to eat on the way. When we arrived to the field we got our things in order and were ready to go get set up. We did and spent the next three hours calling in earnest to a few flocks of geese. None answered our pleas and we picked up and headed home with two geese late in the afternoon. We had another good time but were slightly disappointed with our bag. We’re taking tomorrow off but will be back at it again next weekend or sooner if I get a snow day Thursday and/or Friday.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 01-01-2010 10:12
– – –
Hunting reports the past two days

Thursday- We set up in the beaver slough and saw 5 ducks. No shots fired.

Today- Once again they set up in the beaver slough minus Tony and I. They saw seven ducks and killed three.

Whatever ducks we had are gone. Hopefully this cold brings more down. Even though this season has pretty much sucked minus a handful of hunts we’ve already surpassed last year’s totals. But it has been a lot of work to say the least. Off to Indy tomorrow. We’ll hunt the river Sunday.

Happy New Year. Cheers

Season Counts-
108 ducks
56 geese

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 12-30-2009 12:02
Cloudy, Winds Calm – 25-30 Degrees – Open Water
We set up for a quick duck hunt on the lake this morning the most to a field for a goose hunt. If was early action once again for ducks. We had three groups come in and killed seven but lost one in the ice. Once ducks stopped flying we moved to the field. Nothing was in it when we got set up but soon after geese started flying. We had a limit of ten an hour later and are heading home after a nice three day jaunt. We’re heading back out in the morning in a marsh along the river.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 12-29-2009 18:21
Sunny & Clear, Winds Calm – 10-20 Degrees – Open Water
We set up on the lake again this morning. It was cold! We stayed warm early. Two mallards dropped in and we busted them both. Then we saw several groups that wanted nothing to do with us. A solo dropped in and we got him. Minutes later six came in and landed behind us. We decided to pop up out of our layout blinds and give it a go. Four stayed with us. We should have got five as we missed a couple of easy shots. That was it until around four. We took a lunch break and came back. When we did we sat and waited. At about four a group of four dropped out of the sky. I’ve only seen them drop down like they did once. It was kamikazi! We only got one. The others dropped too far behind us. We worked several other groups until shooting time was up. They poored in when we were picking up. One more hunt with our buddy Scooter. Then we return home for some of those Ohio River Zone birds, or at least we hope.

Posted By:
Aaron-Vogler
Web Member

Southern Indiana 12-29-2009 15:09
– – –
Haven’t been in over a week, but am hearing good things about many new birds, so its sounds like Bert was correct. The guys I hunt with shot some redheads and greenheads today and saw several groups of 50+ mallards. They also reported many divers: Cans, Goldeneye and Buffleheads. It sounds like our regular late season push has arrived, finally. I’m gonna give it my best here the last few weeks or until I get burned out on blank skies.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 12-28-2009 17:34
Cloudy, Snow Flurries – 10-20 Degrees – Open Water
We had another fine morning today. It started quick. Ducks were all over us early and often. We had ten birds on the water twenty minutes in. After that it quit for a while. Pairs to four came in every so often. We worked three groups of geese. One came in perfect. Ended up with 19 mallards and three geese. We tried to wait for that last bird to fill our limit but couldn’t wait it out. Birds started coming in ten minutes after we picked up.

Scooter put us on them again. Thanks to him! Dad doesn’t get out with us much due to work. He made it today.

I’ll post pics when we get back.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone- THE X 12-27-2009 09:44
Sunny & Clear, High Winds – 30-34 Degrees – Open Water
Complete and total CARNAGE this morning.

I woke up pretty tired and truth be told, went back to bed. We were planning on setting up where we hunted yesterday and I didn’t see any birds returning after being under the gun yesterday. Boy was I wrong. I arrived at Randy’s around 5 and we shot the sugar for a while and left for the X around quarter till 6. The walk in was pleasant and not as taxing as it was yesterday. We got to the X and threw out our decoys, some of which were inflatable, which are nice for the type of area we were in. We moved up from where we were yesterday and had ten or so minutes until shooting time. It was a perfect morning for birds to fly. Five minutes in I heard a mallard whistling and blew on the call for a while just to get warmed up. The first group flew in about ten minutes later. Three landed right in our faces. We got two. How one escaped is beyond me but he was lucky to say the least. Doubles and triples continued to come in for the next 20 minutes. The shooting was right in your face. If the few ducks that landed behind us or out of range in front of us would have came in like they did it really would have been something. The hunt was still our best of the year here in the Ohio River Zone, as we ended up with nine birds for the morning. They can rest for the next few days. We’re headed to Indy in the morning.

A shout out to Randy. He put us on the X this morning. Thanks buddy! Marty and Tony did real well for us too this morning. Our little clan is fun to say the least. The only sour note came from the fact that dad was at church. We hope to get him some action in the morning.

Pictures posted in grip and grin.

[Edited By Bert Holtzman on 2009-12-27 18:33]

Posted By:
Corey-Cordray
Guest

South Zone 12-27-2009 07:35
Cloudy, Snow Flurries – 25-30 Degrees – Open Water
Hunted a field today and killed 3 honkers and a mallard. Dad shot a banded goose from Wisconsin. Some of them must be local birds that have been getting hunted hard since they were slightly skittish. Going to let it rest for awhile and go down to Goose Pond tomorrow morning.

Indiana Duck Hunting Report Archive

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 12-26-2009 17:41
– – –
Two mallards this morning. We lost two more. Saw about 25 ducks. Same old show.

I did see quite a few birds flying the river this morning. Maybe things will pick up soon. Who knows.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 12-24-2009 13:47
– – –
Hunted the timber slough this morning. We got set up and heard mallards on their roost soon after. They left at day break. Two hoodies landed and swam in. The boys shot. We got one.

We worked a few small groups of mallards and three black ducks almost finished. We’ll be back at it in another area Saturday and Sunday. We’re headed north on Monday for hopefully better days. It’s been a rough season so far.

I hit the water this morning for the first time this season. I was sitting on a log and saw some ducks. As I was positioning myself to call I slid off the log I was sitting on and went in. I didn’t get too wet but sure got a lot of laughs.

[Edited By Bert Holtzman on 2009-12-24 15:04]

Posted By:
Corey-Cordray
Guest

South Zone 12-21-2009 20:50
Cloudy, Snow Flurries – 30-34 Degrees – Open Water
Well, it’s getting pretty tough out there right now. Killed a couple mallards on the river Sunday morning but that’s about it. The geese seem to be using the fields so I guess it’s time to just shoot honkers and if a duck comes by it’ll be a miracle.

I drove 375 miles on Saturday and did not see more than 30 ducks. What the hell is going on? Spots that are traditionally holding birds this time of year are holding nothing. Who knows?

Posted By:
kayakis
Web Member

elkhart co. 12-21-2009 20:38
– – –
Tim and I hunted a picked corn field saw some geese. pass shot on one flock. ended up with one goose. going to try a friends farm in the morning picked corn…..jimmy

Posted By:
Aaron-Vogler
Web Member

12-21-2009 09:08
– – –
Its pretty sad out there right now. In regards to scouting efforts to the past two weeks, all areas of early floodwater and holes in fields are lacking use of any kind. Haven’t seen but a few divers this year, barely any high flying groups at all, very few geese and the mallards that are around seem to have been here for some time now.

Posted By:
cullenliam
Guest

12-21-2009 04:14
– – –
Seems to be more deer than ducks right now. However, just finished with deer, I think. Not hearing good duck reports from my buddies. The fields have beemn holding a good goose turnout…giving it a go this week.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River 12-20-2009 10:50
Cloudy, Snow Flurries – 25-30 Degrees – Open Water
I drove along the river this morning hoping to see some birds. It just isn’t worth getting out there right now plus we’re all tired. Didn’t see but about 6 ducks. I also didn’t see many hunters. That says enough.

Keep those fingers crossed. We still have some time left.

Posted By:
shady
Guest

Ohio River 12-19-2009 19:23
Cloudy, Snow & Rain Mix – 30-34 Degrees – Open Water
Didn’t see many birds today, saw about 20 ducks total, no geese at all. Ended up with 2 mallards. Going to try the corn tomorrow, I’m optimistic!

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 12-19-2009 15:34
Cloudy, Accumulating Snow – 30-34 Degrees – Open Water
We set up on the water this morning expecting to have another outstanding hunt. It turned out to be a major disapointment. We probably saw around fifty ducks and zero geese. Most didn’t give us a look. We ended up with a black duck and a gadwall.

Season tally:
60 ducks
43 geese

Posted By:
kmdenning
Web Member

12-17-2009 11:20
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Are there any birds at all in the ohio river zone?

Indiana Duck Hunting Report Archive

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 12-26-2009 17:41
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Two mallards this morning. We lost two more. Saw about 25 ducks. Same old show.

I did see quite a few birds flying the river this morning. Maybe things will pick up soon. Who knows.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 12-24-2009 13:47
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Hunted the timber slough this morning. We got set up and heard mallards on their roost soon after. They left at day break. Two hoodies landed and swam in. The boys shot. We got one.

We worked a few small groups of mallards and three black ducks almost finished. We’ll be back at it in another area Saturday and Sunday. We’re headed north on Monday for hopefully better days. It’s been a rough season so far.

I hit the water this morning for the first time this season. I was sitting on a log and saw some ducks. As I was positioning myself to call I slid off the log I was sitting on and went in. I didn’t get too wet but sure got a lot of laughs.

[Edited By Bert Holtzman on 2009-12-24 15:04]

Posted By:
Corey-Cordray
Guest

South Zone 12-21-2009 20:50
Cloudy, Snow Flurries – 30-34 Degrees – Open Water
Well, it’s getting pretty tough out there right now. Killed a couple mallards on the river Sunday morning but that’s about it. The geese seem to be using the fields so I guess it’s time to just shoot honkers and if a duck comes by it’ll be a miracle.

I drove 375 miles on Saturday and did not see more than 30 ducks. What the hell is going on? Spots that are traditionally holding birds this time of year are holding nothing. Who knows?

Posted By:
kayakis
Web Member

elkhart co. 12-21-2009 20:38
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Tim and I hunted a picked corn field saw some geese. pass shot on one flock. ended up with one goose. going to try a friends farm in the morning picked corn…..jimmy

Posted By:
Aaron-Vogler
Web Member

12-21-2009 09:08
– – –
Its pretty sad out there right now. In regards to scouting efforts to the past two weeks, all areas of early floodwater and holes in fields are lacking use of any kind. Haven’t seen but a few divers this year, barely any high flying groups at all, very few geese and the mallards that are around seem to have been here for some time now.

Posted By:
cullenliam
Guest

12-21-2009 04:14
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Seems to be more deer than ducks right now. However, just finished with deer, I think. Not hearing good duck reports from my buddies. The fields have beemn holding a good goose turnout…giving it a go this week.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River 12-20-2009 10:50
Cloudy, Snow Flurries – 25-30 Degrees – Open Water
I drove along the river this morning hoping to see some birds. It just isn’t worth getting out there right now plus we’re all tired. Didn’t see but about 6 ducks. I also didn’t see many hunters. That says enough.

Keep those fingers crossed. We still have some time left.

Posted By:
shady
Guest

Ohio River 12-19-2009 19:23
Cloudy, Snow & Rain Mix – 30-34 Degrees – Open Water
Didn’t see many birds today, saw about 20 ducks total, no geese at all. Ended up with 2 mallards. Going to try the corn tomorrow, I’m optimistic!

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 12-19-2009 15:34
Cloudy, Accumulating Snow – 30-34 Degrees – Open Water
We set up on the water this morning expecting to have another outstanding hunt. It turned out to be a major disapointment. We probably saw around fifty ducks and zero geese. Most didn’t give us a look. We ended up with a black duck and a gadwall.

Season tally:
60 ducks
43 geese

Posted By:
kmdenning
Web Member

12-17-2009 11:20
– – –
Are there any birds at all in the ohio river zone?

Indiana Duck Hunting Report Archive

Posted By:
Corey-Cordray
Guest

South Zone 12-15-2009 16:38
Cloudy, High Winds – 30-34 Degrees – Open Water
Had a nice goose hunt this morning in a disced cornfield. Three of us killed six honkers and I killed one with a band on it from Nunavut, Canada. Looks like we have picked up a few migrating geese in the last few days. NW winds should continue to bring a few birds down.

Posted By:
Aaron-Vogler
Web Member

SW Indiana 12-14-2009 20:44
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Drove around Friday for a few hours and found relief in seeing what appeared to be new birds around plus a few pits holding quite a few geese. Drove around for two hours today, absolutely nothing and I mean nothing. Yea I know where some birds are and always are, but those places just dont count sometimes.

Posted By:
Sean Riley
Web Member

porter co. cornfield 12-13-2009 21:48
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had a great shoot today…12 mallards and 6 geese….it was our best shooting of the year 0 birds made it out of the field!!! the local co made an apperance and got to see us work 6 mallards and kill all 6!!!no one shot at the same birds,and that never seems to work like that….and 6 geese came in and we killed all 6…it was supposed to be a goose hunt,I didnt think there were ducks using the field,so we didnt set the full body ducks,but we did have the mojo….if the last group of geese woulda come 2 min sooner we woulda had our 4 man limit of geese!!!!

Posted By:
TRM
Web Member

12-12-2009 21:59
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last day for me in the north zone. Pretty bad season, but today made up for it. Hunted the big lake and 2 bull cans came and they stayed. My dads first Can in 40 years of hunting kinda cool. Also killed one bluebill. Missed a drake mallard and one other bluebill that was it. Now it is time 2 start hunting the south zone. Maybe but a hurtin on the geese we will see.

Rack’ em

Posted By:
Corey-Cordray
Guest

South Zone 12-12-2009 17:25
Cloudy, Winds Calm – 30-34 Degrees – Open Water
Hunted a lake today and killed a couple of buffleheads. That wasn’t the real story of the day. The motor did not start but thanks to a couple guys that towed us out to our spot and towed us back in when they were done, we had a fun morning. Back at it on the river in the AM.

Posted By:
shady
Guest

Washington County 12-12-2009 17:11
Sunny & Clear, Winds Calm – 10-20 Degrees – Open Water
Didn’t see many birds at all today with the exception of the sandhills. Did see a few geese though by themselves and flying with the sandhills. Had 2 snows look at us, that’s about it, saw 8 ducks total (mallards, blacks). Did manage to end the morning with 1, had a pair of canadas come into the duck decoys, got my first band of the year. Thus far, really disappointing, just not seeing any birds at all.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 12-12-2009 13:16
Sunny & Clear, Winds Calm – 10-20 Degrees – Open Water
We split up this morning and had some success. Randy and Scott took 8 mallards and a goose. Tony and I had limited spots. We got three green but didn’t find one. Ducks were skittish. We worked just a few groups. We did work a group of 30 geese and thought they were going to finish. To no avail.

Not a bad two days. We’ll be back on the big river tomorrow.

Posted By:
Forrest-Eads
Field Editor

Stillwater-Northfork / Merom 12-11-2009 17:05
Sunny & Clear, High Winds – 25-30 Degrees – Ice
All the birds around here have picked up and moved on. The marsh is all ice….Northfork is 98% ice ….maybe saw 50 birds all day. And NO Geese at all !! Except for the 200 plus in the Paynetown campground.

As for Merom…they had (keyword HAD) lots of birds. The guys said they had at least a 1000 birds that got up and headed out on Thursday. 4 parties killed 4 ducks on Thursday. I would be willing to bet it will be a madhouse tomorrow morning !! Everyone fighting to get 1st pick and blind 7 !

Time for a mini vacation and some windshield time to see if the geese will find any of my fields. I guess I am going to have to build a neighborhood just to hunt in !!

Posted By:
Sean Riley
Web Member

12-11-2009 16:55
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thanks for the pics Bert!!!!found some field feeding mallards this afternoon…gonna try them sunday…tomorrow is gonna be a scout day

Posted By:
Corey-Cordray
Guest

Home 12-11-2009 14:42
Arctic Blast – Froze Out
Looks like it is a repeat of last year. No birds at any of my spots and no sign of improvement. Bring on the beer!

Indiana Duck Hunting Report Archive

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 12-11-2009 12:38
Sunny & Clear, High Winds – 10-20 Degrees – Open Water
Had an exceptional hunt this morning. They really poored in at shooting time and we had ten on the water before we knew it! After that pairs came in consistently. We even had three gadwall come in low and got every one of them. We took a four gun limit of mallards and added those gadwall. I’ll post pics when I get home Sunday. We hope to keep shooting this weekend.

[Edited By Bert Holtzman on 2010-01-17 18:20]

Posted By:
kmdenning
Web Member

12-11-2009 10:02
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Are you saying that the ducks are here? I haven’t seen a thing. Have killed only a few so far this season. If they are here, what zone are they concentrated in. Good Luck.

Posted By:
TRM
Web Member

12-10-2009 16:56
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Big concentration of canada’s behing my place of work right now. If u got a field in the area you will smash’em as for ducks I don’t think I need 2 say anything. But I will after it tomorrow. All u can do is try.

Posted By:
Spaniel
Guest

IN South Zone 12-07-2009 07:33
Mostly Cloudy, No Precipitation – 25-30 Degrees – Open Water
Folks – Put in 2 full days this weekend -started out Sat am by killing time spectating on the main lake @ patoka waiting for a buddy to break free and head to Vincennes @ 10 am for the Sat pm hunt

Threw out a small spread and hunkered down @ 19 degrees near the Patoka beach to watch the morning unfold – heard 8-10 volleys from 4 or so other parties on the lake, and never fired a cap, not that near the beach is the place to set up on Patoka… saw a few divers, gulls, grebes and not the first puddle duck. two geese locked up and sat near the beach 5 minutes after I had picked up…not that the beach is the place to set up on patoka!

Dog story – Tank,the american water spaniel (AWS) is now 4 1/2 and in the groove – SAT. his owner, not real interested in getting wet if I didn’t have to with newly patched waders- pitched dekes in the dark from the shore, some near, some far… all around submerged veg. Turned out the far ones had a hat floating ditch between me and them, and the wader patch didn’t – I couldn’t get ’em w/out swimming… After questioning the intelligence of the blockhead that threw the blocks – I looked @ Tank…hmmmmm

Lined him up and sent him to the 1st dekes – told him to FETCH! and he looked to me after winding the blocks – twice – like “you idiot – they are plastic” – i begged and he bit and I was in business… 5 reps later I was outta there and loving my dog. In 17 years of having dogs I had never asked Tank or my first AWS to play pick up dekes.. try it – it’s pretty handy! He had a ball -found a new calling in life!

Rolled to the white river bottoms w/ 3 buddies to be guests in set blinds in flooded corn and beans and had an awesome Sat. afternoon – birds were very active and all the groups took sub limit bags of mallards and woodies -still a lot of woodies around and probably a thousand birds in this immediate part of Indiana.

Hunted an oxbow lake off the white river with a great setup all day Sunday right adjacent to where we thumped ’em the night before and never fired a cap. the flooded fields that were hammerin ’em maybe had three volleys – dead quiet Sunday. Had a mature bald eagle at 40 yards come in feet down and backpedaling thinking our dekes were dinner – awesome sight… had a few woodies shoot by out of range, One group of local geese milling around, a hoodie, and thats it. so it goes…

Those that watch this stuff are expecting a push on the next jet as up north is begining to get snow and lock up -our hosts on the White River for Sat/Sun haven’t seen the real pushes yet -the area they watch will hold 10 to 20X the birds they had this weekend.

Season’s open today in KY, have a few farm spots we’ll try and gettin both sons home for the holidays from college soon, and we’ll be after ’em. Would had posted about the two early season and two main season hunt’s so far on Patoka, Lemon, and Monroe but there was Nuthin Much to report!

Word is some of the boys with private wetlands on the Muscatatuck bottoms are having a Good! season and holding birds. Once we get some winter rains and the White and Muscatatuck get out & flood the corn it should good. Best of the seasons – scout! and be safe…

Oh Yeah – What’s the word on the Patoka Bottoms – Oakland City, etc or Goose Pond?
never tried goose pond – worth the trip?

Posted By:
Sean Riley
Web Member

12-06-2009 21:17
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Its almost over for us north guys…and it hasnt even started yet!!!!!goin after geese in the morning…..it better happen fast if its gonna happen at all….worst I can remember in a long,long time

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 12-06-2009 13:16
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We sat up in a spot that was holding birds this morning. We didn’t see anything. Absolutely nothing.

I got roasted in the blind again this morning. So at least we had a little fun.

Season Totals
28 ducks
42 Geese
I was told I missed a few early season birds in our totals. I can’t count nor see any ducks. Hopefully this weather brings some birds. Big system coming mid week.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 12-05-2009 17:19
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Added another mallard today. Not much seen.

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 12-04-2009 22:03
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Dad and Randy scratched a drake mallard this afternoon. They didn’t see many ducks at all. Still waiting for them to arrive.

They did see some ring necks, which I’m sure are probably new birds. We didn’t see them last weekend.

Posted By:
Sean Riley
Web Member

11-29-2009 21:19
– – –
dear Santa…I would like some snow for Christmas…and if you could get it here this week,I will leave you extra cookies!!
ps…Forrest needs some new bigfoot decoys!!!

Posted By:
Corey-Cordray
Guest

South Zone 11-29-2009 19:46
Cloudy, Light Rain & Drizzle – 45-50 Degrees
What a dick punch of a weekend this has been. Hunted two areas on Friday and Saturday that should have produced birds but only produced skunks! Went today for our reserve at Monroe and shot one gadwall.

It’s just pitiful right now and we need some kind of weather to get something started. There are birds around but they know where they are safe.

Indiana Duck Hunting Report Archive

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 11-29-2009 10:22
Sunny & Clear, Winds Calm – 45-50 Degrees
Set up in the timber slough this morning. Things were looking up early. We heard mallards and woodies all morning. Unfortunately they flew out before shooting time and most never came back. We saw big groups of ducks around 7:45, a mixture of gadwall and wood ducks. Ended up with a hen gadwall. It’s been a disapointing opener. Back at it next weekend. Back to work until then unfortunately.

There was some shooting on the river this morning.

Season Counts-
26 ducks
39 Geese

[Edited By Bert Holtzman on 2009-11-29 10:23]

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River Zone 11-28-2009 18:07
Sunny & Clear, Winds Calm – 40-45 Degrees
One would have thought that we would have had a serviceable hunt this morning. Our first split opener on Halloween was above average, water levels were good, and there was no freeze to push the birds we had out. Something happened. This morning was a bust and a shock. Got there this morning and walked in. Randy and Scooter hunted together. I hunted with Tony and Marty. The wait to shooting time said it all. We heard next to nothing. There were a few vocalizing in the timber but not much. Ten minutes after shooting time the other gang of hunters down the way shot. Then Scooter and Randy. We waited a bit longer when I heard the roar of hoodie wings. Plop. Two were in the midst of sitting down. Marty and Tony sprung into action. Two hoodies met their maker. I didn’t shoot. I didn’t have a chance and am glad. Yuck! That was it. Nothing more flew in. The opener was offially a stinker, though Randy and Scooter did manage a nice drake woodie.

Scouted this afternoon at the lakes. Nothing. Went to another slough this evening. I found some birds. There were some woodies having a good time in the timber. I spent the next hour on a log watching hoodies drop in like jets, vocalizing as they flew (something I’ve never heard before). There were also some mallards on the water that I heard. I’ve honestly never saw so many hoodies before. It’s been an odd one so far to say the least.

The river is a bust right now. We’re in dire need of weather. But at least we have time, something lacking in Illinois right now (see their state forum board for the details).

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 11-27-2009 15:27
Mostly Cloudy, No Precipitation – 35-40 Degrees
We set up in a cornfield this morning. Started out really slow with no ducks whatsoever. Finally some geese started flying. We got one group in and managed three out of it. Only had a couple more groups give us any look. One group fell out behind us but quickly jetted out.

Had flocks of sandhills roll through late in the morning. It was good to see them again.

Off to scout for ducks in the morning. Happy hunting.

Posted By:
oldsilverfox
Web Member

Hamilton Co 11-27-2009 10:57
Cloudy, Occassional Rain Showers – 30-34 Degrees – Open Water
One mallard killed, but, one hell of a up river against the strong current retrieve by Mr. Kane made it worthwile.

Had a Bull Pinnie land in the decoys and Jeff and Kevvin did not see him come in. He floated down river untkouched. What a pretty duck.

At 8:05 am my big buck I have trying to kill decided to cross the river, upon seeing Kane he took off! Just the way it goes.

Got home to see the sandhills going over the house and then a bald eagle flew over. Wow what a sight.

We were covered up with doves! Today is the last day of the season so we may go get after them this afternoon. They were thick!

Stay Safe

Fox

Posted By:
Corey-Cordray
Guest

South Zone 11-26-2009 16:46
Cloudy, High Winds – 35-40 Degrees
Killed 6 on Wednesday morning between 3 of us. Had the wind in our face so it was a pretty good effort to kill 6.

Didn’t get anything this morning due to poor shooting and setting up incorrectly. Should have went further down and we would have been golden but oh well.

Taking tomorrow off and back at it on Saturday morning.

Posted By:
TRM
Web Member

11-26-2009 16:37
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3 guys
2 geese
3 mallards
2 wigeon
1 gaddy
1 woody
1 gw teal
1 redhead
9 ducks and 2 geese. this weather better keep it up.

Rack’ em

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Ohio River 11-26-2009 12:00
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Four guns, four geese this morning. Didn’t see but about 40 ducks and 40 geese. Last year we saw ten times that. Weather needs to change badly. Headed back to Indy tomorrow. This could be a banner week for us.

Two of our geese were banded making this hunt with something to be thankful about.

Season counts
24 ducks
39 geese

[Edited By Bert Holtzman on 2009-11-26 12:03]

Posted By:
Bert Holtzman
Field Editor

Around Indy 11-25-2009 16:18
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Randy and the boys slammed ten ducks and eleven geese this morning. Bronsugaris kept me out of the game. The coach is putting me in tomorrow. Modern medicine is amazing.

Season count-
24 ducks
35 geese

posted via Iphone

[Edited By Bert Holtzman on 2009-11-26 14:53]

Posted By:
Sean Riley
Web Member

private marsh….porter county 11-25-2009 00:07
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we had a pretty good hunt this morning….2 guys 7 mallards and a goose….coulda been done in 10 min but had to wait on the fog and some better shooting light

Posted By:
Sean Riley
Web Member

11-23-2009 20:16
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Might actually get into a good hunt tomorrow!!! A marsh north of my house a few miles has a bunch of mallards using it,they showed up a few days ago,and as luck would have it a friend of mine has permission there!!!Hopefully I can finally post a positive report!!!