Posted: Sat Oct 14, 2006 8:33 pm
..........IN FACT!
..........
(Geez, does this guy ever shut-up?
)........hay bales come-in extremely handy when there's a blowing snow.
They keep the snow off you and your equipment and offer a realistic place to hide because of the fact that the ground on the downwind side of the drift still has vegetation on it (most of the time).......and you don't have to 'snow' your blind. A snow cover in this situation wouldn't work too well next to the downwind side of a hay bale.
We just put the blinds together and left a space between us for Sprig. The ducks bombed that field. Actually, I found the field about 8:00 that morning, found the owner's house, got permission, went back to the hotel to get our gear, set-up in the field, and started hunting around 11:30a.m.
I couldn't believe how wave after wave of ducks came off the lake below us. They would feed in different parts of the field, then fly bakc to sit on the lake, only to be replaced by another wave of hungry birds. This went-on all afternoon, but we were 'done' in about an hour. Very memorable hutning experience.
There was a neighbor that saw the birds and got permission to hunt the same field. We didn't know he was out there until he came walking up the hill to ask if we would take the dog and help him find a couple of his birds that fell in some cover. I apologized for not knowing he was there and said we'd pick-up and leave. He said he knew we had been given permission and came-out to hunt a different part of the field.......that it would be better for all of us if there were a couple of groups of hunters in the field to keep the birds from grouping in a part of the field no one was 'at'. Hey......'worked for us......and we all had a great time. Wytrykusz was his name, I think
, (pronounced wi-TRI-kish )........he said we could just call him.....'Lawren' (short for Lawerence).......
Nice guy!......he said he'd take us to his grouse hole this year.




They keep the snow off you and your equipment and offer a realistic place to hide because of the fact that the ground on the downwind side of the drift still has vegetation on it (most of the time).......and you don't have to 'snow' your blind. A snow cover in this situation wouldn't work too well next to the downwind side of a hay bale.
We just put the blinds together and left a space between us for Sprig. The ducks bombed that field. Actually, I found the field about 8:00 that morning, found the owner's house, got permission, went back to the hotel to get our gear, set-up in the field, and started hunting around 11:30a.m.
I couldn't believe how wave after wave of ducks came off the lake below us. They would feed in different parts of the field, then fly bakc to sit on the lake, only to be replaced by another wave of hungry birds. This went-on all afternoon, but we were 'done' in about an hour. Very memorable hutning experience.
There was a neighbor that saw the birds and got permission to hunt the same field. We didn't know he was out there until he came walking up the hill to ask if we would take the dog and help him find a couple of his birds that fell in some cover. I apologized for not knowing he was there and said we'd pick-up and leave. He said he knew we had been given permission and came-out to hunt a different part of the field.......that it would be better for all of us if there were a couple of groups of hunters in the field to keep the birds from grouping in a part of the field no one was 'at'. Hey......'worked for us......and we all had a great time. Wytrykusz was his name, I think


Nice guy!......he said he'd take us to his grouse hole this year.
