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Re: I predict...

Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2014 9:04 pm
by duck_dynasty
Well Fowler u would be correct. The push has begun. Hardly saw a pond the last two days where I'm hunting in western MN without at least a few birds on it. Also seeing a fair amount of geese and lots of coots.
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Day 1
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Get out this week/weekend. The push is on boys.


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Re: I predict...

Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2014 10:47 pm
by h2ofwlr
Fish Felon wrote: Way to go out on a limb!

Well thank you! I'm glad I made your day. :mrgreen:

It seems I learned not to be too outlandish on predictions... a LOT less chastizing that way when I am wrong. :lol:


Trigger wrote:This morning, I bet he shot 2 drake redheads. 2 drake bluebills, 1 green head, and 1 canvasback, drake of course.


I wish!!!! I was working today, so I did not get out.

Re: I predict...

Posted: Wed Oct 29, 2014 8:38 am
by Bailey
h2ofwlr wrote:
Fish Felon wrote: Way to go out on a limb!

Well thank you! I'm glad I made your day. :mrgreen:

It seems I learned not to be too outlandish on predictions... a LOT less chastizing that way when I am wrong. :lol:


Trigger wrote:This morning, I bet he shot 2 drake redheads. 2 drake bluebills, 1 green head, and 1 canvasback, drake of course.


I wish!!!! I was working today, so I did not get out.



I thought you would be eating duck and tellling us about the great hunt you had! Darn!

Re: I predict...

Posted: Wed Oct 29, 2014 8:40 am
by NitroZ9 Duck Killin
get-n-birdy wrote:I predict it will be like most other years, ducks will migrate south in the fall. Then back north again in the spring.


I agree.

Re: I predict...

Posted: Wed Oct 29, 2014 2:31 pm
by Fish Felon
Is h2ofwlr the screen name for Steve Cordts? It would make a lot of sense.
OUTDOORS

Duck season in doldrums; cold front could help

By DOUG SMITH , STAR TRIBUNE
October 28, 2014 - 8:18 PM


Weather change should impact animal activity.

Minnesota’s duck hunters are experiencing the midseason doldrums, but the recent cooler weather could prompt an influx of ducks into the state.

“I think we’ll see some movement [of ducks] in and out of the state; that’s what we’ve been waiting for,’’ said Steve Cordts, Department of Natural Resources waterfowl specialist.

But don’t expect a big push of ducks. There is no major cold front forecast in the near term to send large numbers of ducks south from Canada. Meanwhile, hunting has been slow in many areas, but decent in some.

“It’s been very good in the northwest at Thief Lake and Roseau River,’’ Cordts said. “They were averaging 4.5 ducks per hunter at Rosseau, which is phenomenal.’’ Rice Lake National Wildlife Refuge near McGregor is still holding around 200,000 ducks, Cordts said, down from about 300,000 last week. Most of those are ringnecks, which should depart the state soon, Cords said.

Overall, the waterfowl season has been OK, he said. So far, the DNR has sold about 87,000 state duck stamps, about 1,000 more than t this time last year.

Harvest should help

Both deer hunters and pheasant hunters are helped when cornfields are harvested, and after a slow start, that’s finally happening.


As of Monday, 41 percent of the corn crop has been harvested, still about 10 days behind average. That percentage should greatly increase by the time the firearms deer season opens Nov. 8.

For pheasant hunters, action should pick up as harvest progresses and birds don’t have cornfields for refuge.

Record smallmouth?

Conservation officer Joyce Kuske of Little Falls is investigating a possible record smallmouth bass taken illegally from the Mississippi River in Little Falls around Oct. 17.

Anyone with information can call the TIP line at 1-800-652-9093. The regular bass season closed Sept. 7, but a catch-and-release season runs Sept. 8-Feb. 22.

The state record smallmouth is an 8-pounder caught on West Battle Lake in Otter Tail County in 1948.

Doug Smith • 612-673-7667