Perseverance pays off. (Arseholes!)

sjemac

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Took my oldest boy, Aidan, 9, out today for a duck hunt. His third time out with me this year though he can't shoot for another 3 years.

Day starts with the dog tearing out into the back yard to get a face full of SKUNK! Damn! I get a bottle of SCOPE and dump it over his head and tether him in the back of the truck. It'll be a while before he rides in the cab again.

Went to the old stand by lake and were set up by first light. I'd left this lake alone for 3 weeks so I expected a quick slaughter. Nothing. Not a bird. Barely even a coot. Waited an hour and then took a tour.

We NEVER hunt the back end of the lake since it is the roost and we call it the "nursery". We hunt the other pockets and catch the dribs and drabs as they move from the back end out to other parts. Generally guarantees steady action of singles and small flocks. I took a look back there and it was littered with empties, flattened spots in the reeds where guys had shot from, and sadly, about 13 geese that had been shot and left. Other than the wasted birds the guys who shot there had every right to and while them screwing the lake was disappointing, there isn't a lot I can do about it other than report the wasted birds.

I pull the dekes and head back to the truck. Load the boat and take off to the east for another lake I know.

Get there and it is covered up with birds. Quickly get the gear and kid into the boat and head out scaring up thousands of birds. We head about a half mile up the lake to a little island and I quickly toss out the dekes, hide the boat and set the boy and myself on the leeward side of the little island. I shoot at two flocks and miss both.

Then I see this truck pounding across the fields towards me. Two guys in it get out. One says. "What are you doing?" (Boat, decoys and dog didn't quite let him puzzle it out, I guess).

"Hunting ducks."

"You can't be here."

"It's a slough" I reply.

"It's private." says he.

"No it's not! I talked to the warden about it 4 years ago." (I've hunted it for 4 years without any trouble).

"Well you're on land. You have to be in a boat."

(Technically he had me there since I had stepped up past the high water mark to talk to him. The island was about 8 by 10 with a small patch of weeds on top. Though you don't have to be in a boat but can hunt by foot below the high water mark and the island itself I now find out is owned by the county anyway. He was either another hunter, a guide or one of those increasingly apparent land owners that believe anything bordering their property is theirs to control too.)

I figure I'll shut him down and say, "Fine. I'll move to the reeds over there."

No answer.

"You OK with me in the reeds?" I ask again.

"I'm making a call. Expect a visit." is his reply.

"Call George W. for all I care!" I yell back.

Second time that day, I pull the dekes and move about 200 yards down the lake to a patch of reeds. (Thank GOD that Texas rigged decoys make set up and pulling a matter of a few minutes). It's about 11 now and I haven't shot a duck yet. Ducks start trickling in and I nail one fat Mallard on the second shot. Dog does the retrieve and while doing it I spot the guys in the truck again coming back to watch.

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Bozos truck.
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Dog trying to quit early by bringing in deke with duck.
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I try to ignore them but when you are being watched it is disconcerting. Whatever. Wind picks up and the birds start pouring in. I pick up 7 more birds in 15 minutes (had planned on targeting drakes only but the hens were the 2nd half of doubles and I wanted to get done and back home with the boy before he got too hungry).

All big mature birds. The boy had a good time despite all the moving. Too bad a couple of arseholes had to put the sour note on the day.

George W. and the game wardens never showed. If the guys called, I KNOW exactly how that conversation went.;)

The boy, stinky dog and ducks.
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Glad to here the day turned out OK. Too bad your son had to witness some of the BS you have to put up with when hunting. I know what you mean about some land owners thinking they can control everything.

In some of my adventures some a-holes even plowed up legal roads saying its their right to stop people from going through.

Two years ago a good friend found a nice piece of crown land next to some posted land. He had a legal stand and all the right to be there. The knob who owned the land would drive all over the place every time he saw his vehicle parked. He did this on purpose to screw up his hunt.

Buddy got smart and had his wife drop him off out of site and walked in a bit further. He got two nice bucks that year from his stand. The arsehole came tearing out on his quad each time but the deer were on the crown land side of the fence so he couldn't do a damn thing.:D
 
The knob who owned the land would drive all over the place every time he saw his vehicle parked. He did this on purpose to screw up his hunt.

Good time to call a Fish Cop and have them explain to the fellow that interfering with a legal hunt is a criminal act! Funny how people tone things down in a hurry then!

Love the last pic sjemac......definitely says a thousand words!
 
I've had an "audience" before, cell phone in hand, pacing back and forth, OBVIOUSLY phoning the wardens about someone "hunting" bla bla bla...

NEVER had the wardens show up, I didn't leave either. I know where I can and can't hunt and act accordingly. Glad to see you didn't let these a$$hats mess up your day. It's also just as important for your boy to see you know the rules and follow them, staying calm and assertive is important.

AWESOME pic of stinky dog and your boy! Thanks!

Cheers
Jay
 
Went back today to prove the point. It was -10 and the lake froze overnight. Shot one goose and it took an hour of busting ice to get back. Almost done here. Oh well. My moose tag comes good on Saturday.
 
We had the CO's called to check us when hunting by Water Valley, I guess the neighbors were "true" animal lovers or something. He checked us out and went on his way. I wanted to make another loop just out of spite. The CO's get pretty annoyed with these calls but you never know what they might find.

Good for you showing your son how to difuse the situation and most the most of it despite the odds. Good job taking pics of the goof too in case you did need to defend yourself. Hope the moose trip goes smoother.
 
Good call on ignoring them. I've had an a$$hat hunter try and kick me off my own deeded land. He asked if I had permission, I told him I didn't need any and asked if he had permission. The answer was "Yes". When I told him I hadn't met him before he got snarly. When he finally did leave, I called all my neighbors and he was kicked out of everywhere he went. In my area hunting permission is very easy to obtain, and fellows like this pi$$ everyone off.
 
Congrats on the good hunt minus the retard. Awesome of you to take your son with you. If we hunters are going to survive we need to teach our children the sport too. Took my 4 year old boy coyote shooting on Saturday. He liked it even though we didn't see anything and he froze his butt off.
 
You acomplished more than just getting the young fella out for a hunt. He got to learn how to stand his ground and do it with knowledge of the law and integredy. This is a lesson that he will remember some day if he has to step up and justify his sport should a situation arise. Good for you and some nice gunning!
 
Nice pics and fine mallards. Nothing like introducing your kids to the outdoors.

Have to mention that I have had a few "run in's" on public shooting grounds and provincial wildlife management areas through the years as well. Through some investigation I found these grumpy people to be outfitters or guide services. Seems they bring clients to these locations to shoot waterfowl. If you hunt on week days only as I do and happen to beat them out to a good location then some words are exchanged.

It is my feeling that provincial game departments don't do enough to inform outfitter services that the in fact that do NOT own the resource but rather use it as all other hunters do. Just my 2 cents worth....
 
I'm beginning to think these guys are outfitters of some sort. The trucks they were driving didn't match the trucks owned by the land owner. They came in a convoy and KNEW the law (most land owners in my experience don't) as was evidenced by them trying to bluff me off the lake and their ever-changing reasoning.

Anyway, the boy didn't witness much of the exchange. I handed him the duck call and told him to "give it" while I talked to the men in the truck. He was quacking like a tortured duck while I was talking. I don't think he heard anything.
 
That's sad that a fellow hunter would give you crap about legally hunting somewhere. :(

Looked like a good day despite the BS though.
 
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