Oregon Duck and Goose Hunting Report Archive

Posted By:
Casey-Huxoll
Field Editor

McCormick Slough 11-15-2006 17:23
Cloudy, Winds Calm – 40-45 Degrees
Hunted this morning for geese at McCormick. Lots of geese in the air had a couple flocks work the decoys. also had some ducks working the field. I heard that they didnt do very well hunting the river or the slough blinds. But there are more birds in the area everyday.

Posted By:
Casey-Huxoll
Field Editor

McCormick Slough 11-13-2006 18:39
Sunny & Clear, High Winds – 45-50 Degrees
Hunted McCormick slough on sat. shot 1 greenhead and 3 widgeon. not a bad hunt, windy. there were a lot of mallards working the main slough. i think that the numbers are really starting to come up.

[Edited By huxollc on 2006-11-13 18:39]

Posted By:
Richard-Roy
Web Member

se Oregon 11-13-2006 16:10
Cloudy, Light Rain & Drizzle – 45-50 Degrees
The most common species of duck I saw on Friday was pintail!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Saw some nice flocks of mallards, some lesser scaup, GWTs. A few white geese around, tons of tundra swans, and Canadas were abundant. Got two nice roosters.

In about an hour and a half I got two roosters and a young pinnie drake. Not a bad outing.

Got weather out here predicted for the week. So, I imagine that we will see birds moving all week

Posted By:
Paul-Cantrell
Field Editor

Mohawk Valley 11-11-2006 16:08
Cloudy, Occassional Rain Showers – 40-45 Degrees
Well the birds are in the valley. I have some large flocks of Mallards flying up and down the river pretty much all day. This morning was 3 greenheads and a hen.

/Paul

Posted By:
mudmonkey
Guest

Siltcoos lake 11-06-2006 21:17
Cloudy, Rain & Thunderstorms – 45-50 Degrees
Ive been slamming them here at siltcoos…the mallards are starting to thin up though it seems. So much wind and rain.

Posted By:
salton sea man
Web Member

northeast of klamath 11-06-2006 18:00
Cloudy, Occassional Rain Showers – 35-40 Degrees
hunted two areas northeast of klamath falls and had outstanding success on geese…..looks like there’s new honkers coming into the valleys…saw lots of new ducks in the air; very high and heading south……some small flocks of snows…either low and shootable or on oxygen heading southeast..????anyone hunting agency lake area or hank’s marsh????

Posted By:
greenhead hitman
Web Member

sauvie island 11-05-2006 20:33
Cloudy, Light Rain & Drizzle – 50-60 Degrees
Hunted west side for a handful of birds , a good number of teal on the island along with mallards .

Posted By:
Richard-Roy
Web Member

se Oregon (NOT Summer Lake) 11-03-2006 18:54
Cloudy, Light Rain & Drizzle – 45-50 Degrees
Things were freezing up earlier in the week, but now the temps have warmed up and water has re-opened. Snows are in along with lots of shovelers. Seeing more scaup too.

Posted By:
Paul-Cantrell
Field Editor

Willamette Valley 10-27-2006 13:43
Sunny & Clear, Morning Fog – 35-40 Degrees
Sorry crsjhawk, been focused on deer hunting. I have been shooting some ducks in the river behind the house but for the most part I don’t get serious until Nov. Some of my friends picked up a few birds on Siltcoos this past weekend and we downed a goose or two but those were mostly residents.

/Paul

Posted By:
crsjhawk
Guest

Summer Lake 10-26-2006 21:57
Mostly Sunny, No Precipitation – 45-50 Degrees
Where are all of the reports from Oregon. I don’t even live in that state and I am the only one writing anything. Anyway I hunted two days at Summer Lake and limited on snow geese both days. The other guys that I joined down there hunted Saturday through Wed and had great success also. There were five us total that hunted all or some of the five day period. All in we had close to 50 snows and 2 canadians. Not many ducks. There are a lot there but not many in range. We were more focused on the snows anyway. The area south of the link dike that was drained and disced last year now has water and the birds are pooring in there. With large concentrations only a few hundred yards south of the dike, good things are bound to happen. Good luck.

About Webmaster

Publisher and Webmaster of Waterfowler.com.
Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply