sportsman450 wrote:Legend-That's probably the best evaluation of the situation I've read since I joined the internet.
Well sporty I know a lot of young wise men who are deader than a mofo but I've never known an old man who got to be that way by being a fool.
There are more pieces to this puzzle that we haven't quiet figured out where to put them yet. We can't discount the fact that the actual numbers of birds have not been sufficent to sustain teh 60/6 seasons we've been getting. Even with the way over inflated December counts, 3.2 million in La. was a joke and a slap in the face to us that knew better, when you add them all up it doesn't come close to being adequate for a 60/6 season.
Leasing is becoming the same cancer in states to our North that it is right here at home. More and more Northern farmers are discovering this huge cash cow called leasing and are flooding their fields for duck hunters. Now I don't begrudge a farmer for making a living anyway he can but it's reaping havoc on what we once considered to be the natiral migration of birds. Habitat is popping up over night, via the water pump, that hasn't been there in years past. Fetch is raising hell about this very thing over at teh fuge about DU property in ND that could end up in the hands of a commercial outfitter. Apparently many ND duck hunters see this as a big issue and one they would like to avoid.
Hunting pressure is a new can of worms that we've just opened as well. No one knows what kind of impact it really has on migrating birds. Our good friends at Delta will be starting a research study on this so hopefully soon we can have some answers to this as well. Lack of hunting pressure does attract and hold birds inside the blue lines at NWR's. I've witnessed this first hand. Mollicy Farms is the no hunt area of the Upper Ouachita NWR near my home. It's a 16,000 acre moist soil unit. Teh feds also pay a farmer bug bucks after he harvest it not to hunt 2 sections of land adjacent to it for an additional food plot. While hunting success in this area was only fair this 16,000 acres held a million birds. I've witnessed this on 2 different occasions. Another similar moist soil until only minutes from my house can offer you one of the most bizzare sights you've ever witnessed. You can actually drive to the waters edge and get out of your car while wild mallard ducks only 40 yards away will sit there and look at you. Now that not right and it goes way pass the norm. Those birds should have flushed the minute they first saw your vehicle. Many propose opening these areas to hunting from time to time. My suggestion would be to have a youth hunt once a week. The kids wouldn't kill all that many birds but they would shoot alot and have a good time.
The lack of ducks is a multi faceted problem and one in which there is no quick cure. Not the feds or DU nor Delta have any quick fixes for what we're facing. As sold as I am on Deltas PM projects it won't do us much good if they don't come this far South. The same can be said for DU's wanting more habitat. You can't tell a farmer what to grow or what he can and can't do with his land for financial gain. There is one area that very much needs exploring. According the Migratory Bird Act it is illegal to use bait for the purpose of capturing birds and altering the natural distribution. Many feel, myself included, thats exactly what the feds have done by introducing unharvested food plots in no hunt zones of the NWR's. It doesn't take rocket science to understand that birds will pile up in an area and not move if their is food and the abscence of hunting pressure. We are looking into this and a possible law suit is very much possible. In the grand scheme of things it probably won't amount to much as far as the migration goes but it would be a step in the right direction.
Lots of problems and not many answers.