Been above average for us, all hunting has been in brakes, not a huge number of ducks in the area but our hunts have been highly successful. I do keep my son's numbers and he has been 6 times so far with personal duck harvest of 6, 6, 5, 4, 1, and 6 on those hunts for total of 28 which includes 7 mallards, 13 gadwall, 6 wood ducks, 1 wigeon, and 1 shoveler. He also has a hooded merganser and a Canada goose to add as far as total waterfowl.
We usually have a jam up opening weekend hunt and then maybe a decent hunt or two between then and Christmas. Pretty much deer hunt till the rut tapers off around that time. From Christmas till end of the season has certainly been the time we hunt the most and also see the most success. This season started with ALOT of ducks in the area and I am sure a bunch of great opening weekends, but the area numbers have certainly dwindled. Have been very lucky it seems to have held ducks over this down period and have some quality hunts.
My son did a science fair project last year using his harvest numbers that I started keeping for him his very first season. Numbers, species, dates, and location were data I put on a spreadsheet everytime he hunted. He really is the one that adds to it now and so glad I started it for him when he was a youngster. Surprising what the data tells you when you look at it over a decade....sort of squashes some myths. He broke the hunting time down for his project into (6) 10 day periods. Question he tried to answer for the science project was "If a man only has a 5 day period to vacation for duck hunting in Tallahatchie County MS, what 5 day period would historically give him the most success?". Well of course we assumed the last 5 days of the season would always be the best bet. Data proved otherwise. If the man is looking to kill the most ducks he can in that 5 day period regardless of species then almost any five day period after Christmas was historically pretty consistent. If the person really wanted to zero in on killing mallard limits then there were "spikes" in the data over a 10 year period that repeated enough to look at them as good chances for success. Because we had splits and weekend only hunting season dates for part of the periods being analyzed, it did skew the data. But for the most part, there were definite advantages for hunting opening weekend, second week of December, and second week of January. Mallard numbers more than once or twice were a higher part of the average harvest during these times. Interesting stuff....to me anyway