I've been told, the reason snows, blues, & ross geese taste and smell a little funky in rice/bean country is that they are pulling up wheat & rice by the roots and the ingest a fair amount of this great delta soil. If you've ever seen a bunch of light geese up close, alot of them will have mud & dirt all over their face. They grub and root around in rice & wheat fields.
Specs, on the other hand, feed mainly on the seeds of rice, beans, corn etc. I'm not saying a hungry snow will not eat seeds, but they root around a bunch. I've heard people from up north say that snows & blues on their way down or back to the nesting grounds, hit the corn belt, and end up eating a bunch of corn, and they start tasting better. Several years ago, a buddy wacked a bunch of light geese and invited us over for a cookout. He made snow goose fajitas that were out of this world! I guess you just have to know how to process the meat, how to marinate them properly, etc.
On the spoonie deal, in rice fields, they tend to eat more rice as well as any inverts they can catch. I've cooked them a bunch if any are taken from a rice field. For the most part, you cant tell if your eating a gwteal or any other small duck taken in a rice field. I suspect the same rationale applies to the spoonie as far as ingesting muck while straining for inverts in any flooded field. That being said, I wouldn't shoot or eat a spoonie killed off a big reservior. I've seen those birds feeding in sewage settlement ponds, and in some nasty areas. No thanks.
Drakeshead wrote:Drakeshead wrote:That has been my thought, but have yet to eat one. I usually use them for dog training.
So, that leads me to my next question.
If Specks are the filet of geese, then how come Snow's taste so bad if they are both feeding out of the same fields?
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