Successful Sea Duck Hunt
Nov. 24 - 25, 2006
Tried to sea duck hunt again, this time did it our of a layout boat. Layout boats allow the shooter to have a low profile on the water. You lay on your back in a saucer shaped boat that only sticks up 6 or 8 inches above the water. Ducks, not being the smartest animals, don't realize they are flying towards a trap until it is too late:
Here is an old picture of Jeremy and I in the layout boat:
This boat, though great for hunting, is a bitch to tow in the water. It's shape makes it a natural submarine, so towing it to the hunt, though preferable is out of the question. We tried it, the boat submarined, the fiberglass cracked, and we decided to never do it again. However, we did get it to where it needed to be, and despite leaks, we had some good shoots. On the way out, I photographed a flock of shorebirds:
First, as a test run, we took it just off the beach at Hoopers Island, and hunted for Buffleheads for an hour. After I killed one, I started taking pictures:
Here's a Buffy that got away:
Dave Foote's last shot at the same bird, again a miss. In this picture, notice the shot in the upper right corner, with the wad not far behind.
Following day, we took the layout and set up between Richland Buoy and Applegarth. We targeted Old Squaws:
Dave missed these birds, and I caught it on film. Notice the shot and wad on the water in the left corner, the green blurry projectile is his shotgun shell ejecting across my camera lense:
White winged scoters buzzed our spread. These two are the first I've seen in the Bay. Dave knocked one down, but it dove on impact and vanished:
Back at SHTS, we posed for a shot with our bag, 7 old squaw and 1 scoter:
Tried to sea duck hunt again, this time did it our of a layout boat. Layout boats allow the shooter to have a low profile on the water. You lay on your back in a saucer shaped boat that only sticks up 6 or 8 inches above the water. Ducks, not being the smartest animals, don't realize they are flying towards a trap until it is too late:
Here is an old picture of Jeremy and I in the layout boat:
This boat, though great for hunting, is a bitch to tow in the water. It's shape makes it a natural submarine, so towing it to the hunt, though preferable is out of the question. We tried it, the boat submarined, the fiberglass cracked, and we decided to never do it again. However, we did get it to where it needed to be, and despite leaks, we had some good shoots. On the way out, I photographed a flock of shorebirds:
First, as a test run, we took it just off the beach at Hoopers Island, and hunted for Buffleheads for an hour. After I killed one, I started taking pictures:
Here's a Buffy that got away:
Dave Foote's last shot at the same bird, again a miss. In this picture, notice the shot in the upper right corner, with the wad not far behind.
Following day, we took the layout and set up between Richland Buoy and Applegarth. We targeted Old Squaws:
Dave missed these birds, and I caught it on film. Notice the shot and wad on the water in the left corner, the green blurry projectile is his shotgun shell ejecting across my camera lense:
White winged scoters buzzed our spread. These two are the first I've seen in the Bay. Dave knocked one down, but it dove on impact and vanished:
Back at SHTS, we posed for a shot with our bag, 7 old squaw and 1 scoter:
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