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Flutes are good. I like having one on my lanyard even though they are big and clunky. I think their main advantage it that geese have heard short reeds all the way down from Canada, besides everybody and their pet Minor bird blows one. Giving geese something different, sound and tone wise, is a change up and often works quite well. And, they are generally pretty inexpensive. Something I wish I'd have done when I started out would have been to keep a log of my hunts.Date and timewind directionwx conditions in general (fog, rain, sunny etc)how blinds set up how decoys set upcoverdid we flag, call heavy, etcI believe this would have shortened the learning curve considerably and made patterns easier to recognize.
Good thread...wish I would have seen this earlier. I went out "field" goose hunting today...we got 5...I know nothing about waterfowl hunting. It was awesome to watch those birds lock up and come in to the decoys...what wasn't awesome was my shooting Popping up out of a blind is just not the same as standing on flat ground yelling "pull"!
Quote from: idahohuntr on January 22, 2015, 06:01:21 PMGood thread...wish I would have seen this earlier. I went out "field" goose hunting today...we got 5...I know nothing about waterfowl hunting. It was awesome to watch those birds lock up and come in to the decoys...what wasn't awesome was my shooting Popping up out of a blind is just not the same as standing on flat ground yelling "pull"!It is definitely harder shooting from sitting position, 97% of my shooting is this way so it always feels weird shooting at ducks standing up. I have not used pop-up field blinds, but I can guess that you would want to angle your feet away from where you expect (want) the birds to land so that you have room to swing. This would be to the right for a righty.
Quote from: JJD on January 23, 2015, 06:57:30 AMFlutes are good. I like having one on my lanyard even though they are big and clunky. I think their main advantage it that geese have heard short reeds all the way down from Canada, besides everybody and their pet Minor bird blows one. Giving geese something different, sound and tone wise, is a change up and often works quite well. And, they are generally pretty inexpensive. Something I wish I'd have done when I started out would have been to keep a log of my hunts.Date and timewind directionwx conditions in general (fog, rain, sunny etc)how blinds set up how decoys set upcoverdid we flag, call heavy, etcI believe this would have shortened the learning curve considerably and made patterns easier to recognize.Good tip I can see how the log would help. As it goes the same for duck hunting and recognizing all of the patterns over the years.