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Day 23: A lot of good hunting going on!

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Ducks are still flying and it’s a great weekend to get in some hunting. We’ve gotten good to great reports from a lot of folks and there are some new birds in the area to join with what we’ve already got. I expect a lot of hunters out this weekend and that should keep the birds moving. We are experiencing some of what you can read about below in the state duck report from the LDWF. There are some areas where ducks are really stacked up and others that are struggling.

But overall, it’s a good start to the season and we aren’t even halfway yet. Be safe out there!

Reminder: Goose season

opens again Saturday!

Check out this link or read the copy below

https://www.louisianasportsman.com/hunting/waterfowl-duck-hunting/december-duck-report/

Screen Shot 2019-12-20 at 7.06.32 PMAnd as a bonus today, here’s a writeup from the Louisiana Sportsman and State Duck Leader Larry Reynolds, who released his December aerial survey results Friday:

“Louisiana has a lot more ducks in December than it did in November. An estimated 2.5 times more, to be exact. That’s what the monthly aerial survey by the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries completed this week showed. The 2.57 million ducks in the survey completed this past week is 2.5 times over the November estimate of 1.04 million. That is also 32% higher than last December’s estimate. Estimates for all species except blue-wing teal were higher than November. Most notable was the increase in gadwall and mallards. But the survey results did leave state duck leader Larry Reynolds with some questions.

“There is no doubt that the numbers look a lot better than in November,” he said. “There are two things that concern me, though. First, we flew a lot of marsh that did not have any birds at all, then all of a sudden when we started seeing them, there were gobs and gobs of them.”

Reynolds, a veteran of these surveys, said he’s never seen the ducks so “clumped up” in certain areas.

“It was downright scary in some places. We’d see huge numbers of ducks, then fly three or four more transect lines in the same area and see nothing,” he said. “I know the north wind had blown a lot of water out of the marsh and ducks weren’t there, but then we got to the mouth of the river and there were huge numbers of ducks 15 miles away. There is a lot of marsh without many ducks in it.”

The most extreme example was in SE Louisiana where large numbers of ring-necked ducks were counted in the fresh marsh of upper Terrebonne
Parish SSE of Amelia, then very few ducks were counted on the next 4 transect lines and the line just south of New Orleans for monitoring the Caernarvon freshwater diversion. Then another tremendous concentration of mostly gadwalls, pintails, and ring-necked ducks was encountered
from the West Bay sediment diversion on the west side of the Mississippi River north to past Venice on the east side. Those 2 locations accounted for about 80% of the estimate from the entire SE survey region.

Reynolds summed it up by saying, “When we crunched the numbers, it looked good overall. But the fact is, if you aren’t in one of those areas where it looked really good for numbers, things may be pretty poor in the duck blind.”

Reynolds’ team was not able to do a complete survey of northeast Louisiana due to a short window between the splits and a shortage of observers. Seven of the 30 surveyed areas, including two that normally have high numbers of waterfowl, were not counted. There have been a lot of teal and some gadwalls and pintails reported in the fields in those areas, however. And the number of mallards being taken in the woods has been at last normal or above normal. One stark change in reports was in the Bunkie/Grand Cote area, which had the highest duck and goose counts in November. Ducks declined from 107,000 in November to only 20,000 in this week’s survey and geese fell from an estimated 80,000 to around 33,000.

“There have been a lot of redistribution of ducks and one thing we saw that explains some of the large concentrations of ducks is directly related to habitat. A lot of areas have very little submerged aquatic vegetation and they have very few ducks. When we saw the vegetation picking up, we saw the number of ducks increase dramatically.”

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