i was taught in my pal/rpal not to shoot over or at water.i don't know if it's illegal or just dangerous.i'd say really dangerous,and maybe a little stupid.
i was taught in my pal/rpal not to shoot over or at water.i don't know if it's illegal or just dangerous.i'd say really dangerous,and maybe a little stupid.
I did when MUCH younger, and when a lot of my hunting was along the east coast, like the OP. If you were able to sneak up on an eider or scoter, you took the shot. Those birds generally dive to escape, rather than fly. They'd just pop up about 100 yards out & keep swimming. Since moving west, where the duck hunting is far, far better, there's just no need. Any bird that swims into the dekes just adds to the effectiveness of the spread. Any that sneak by and land before I get a shot, get a free pass. When jump-shooting, I wait 'til the birds actually jump. And I'm with The Spank on killing shots. A sitting bird is much harder to kill cleanly, unless it's a head shot. I finally found some #7 steel to use for head shot cripple rounds.
Thanks, Gatehouse for attempting to improve the spelling of the forum, but efforts along these lines are generally met with abuse and scorn from the illiterate masses. I'll sign up for some of that by pointing out that the term so often butchered these days is actually "I couldn't care less", as in 'I do not care at all'.
So I'm curious -- who here shoots ducks on the water? I know a lot of guys find it un-sporting. I personally have no problem with it, particularly because I do a lot of walking and stalking on the coast here. If I walk a half mile of bog to sneak up on a black duck, you'd better believe I'll shoot it, whether it sees me or not. Everybody I hunt with is the same here, although we generally prefer to get them feet down in dekes. But that isn't always possible, especially if you're walking. Or, right after liftoff works pretty well too.
That being said the only time I am a water swatter is on cripples. Ducks are DAMNED hard to kill on water. Much, much, harder than on the wing and I don't means in terms of actually hitting them. I mean killing them. When they are flying and especially in tight slowed down over decoys or opened up or slowed right down trying to get going again they are much easier to put pellets in the vitals and kill. Sneaking up on them I would flush them as they are much more vulnerable to good vital hits than sitting low on or in the water with wings folded over the body. It seems with the larger shot sizes required with steel head hits on the water do not come easy beyond 20-25 yards due to pattern density. Those are my thoughts on the subject.
To further this thread I would like those who say it is "not sporting" to define sporting? What is giving the duck a sporting chance? I have heard or read these terms all my life. I still have yet to grasp what is meant by being sporting? I have shot ducks in every conceivable manner they could be shot legally. I have water swatted a few in my day, I have shot ducks standing in a field decoys spread, jump shot them both on water and field, have let them land on a field walking around in the decoys to draw in and finish bigger flocks for the group to get shooting at. I haven't shot one other than cripples on water in many years and since moving to the prairies I don't even hunt water any longer and sold off my water spread. I shoot ducks coming to the grain fields. I shoot them out of the sky. Why? Well for starters as I said before I truly find a duck that is opened up much easier to kill. Plus I just plain enjoy shooting them out of the sky and watching them fold up and fall. Do I consider it sporting or giving them a sporting chance? I can't say yes to that because honestly I have no idea what is actually meant by that? To me it's an outdoor writers term to inject some kind of romance or elevate the hunter to some mythical status in the story to make him sound like some kind of ultra ethical hunter. But based on whose ethics? Sporting or sporting chance in my opinion are terms which hunters should not use. I don't believe hunting is a sport in any form. Hunting is a way of life,it is something deeply ingrained in me, its who I am and what I do but it sure as hell doesn't make me feel sporty or sporting?! I don't get that feeling from hockey or baseball or any other "sport" for that matter. Those are sports. Hunting is not, hunting is hunting. To me sports are contested and to me hunting is not a contest.
you got it. it was a perfect legal act there and they are still doing it. we were even using live bait ducks ... that was the way they were hunting. different country different habit.
Its perfectly legal to kill Christians in certain countries...doesnt make it right. My morals and ethics dont waiver regardelss of what country Im standing in. Shooting firearms in the dark and at night is not safe or ethical. Shooting roosting birds while they sleep at night is not ethical or moral. I dont care what country you are in, your ethics and morals should stay true. If they dont, it speaks lots about the person. There.....thats my judgement. I hope you can handle it.
There is no C in the word disgusting. Your spelling is atrocious.
Hopefully you can handle judgement.
See the problem there? Who are you to decide what someone else's morals or ethics should be and pass judgement on them?
IMHO, shooting sitting ducks doesn't take much skill....making it less sporting than wing shooting.
I guess it depends on how much hunting one does or has done, but for me the satisfaction factor is much higher from wing shooting. Also I will only shoot Greenheads, the hens get a pass.![]()
If it's legal, it's legal. A stationary animal stands a far lower chance of being wounded, which I'm fine with.