Western Hunting Journal, Sneak Peak WHJ_Short | Page 41
When hunting geese sustained success is
often determined by how well you hide and
where you position your blinds.
A great hide is arguably the most important element of a
great goose hunt. By Dave Smith
M
ICHAEL PARK AND I CROUCHED deeper into our layout blinds as flock
after flock of cacklers tornado’d into our small spread of decoys.
Deciding it was too large a flock to shoot into we elected to just
enjoy this amazing show, one that never gets old. Birds were build-
ing up; some close, others farther away. After about an hour, one by one, flocks
would pick up and fly past us to another field a half mile away. I was staring
at the birds on the ground when one stood out to me about 90 yards away. It
was the rare “bling” of a yellow neck collar — the trophy “antlers” of any sea-
soned goose hunter. I watched the bird for several minutes until it eventually
got up and joined a flock as it flew towards me. It was low to my side, about
45 yards away. It was at that moment I exploded out of my blind and made a
clean shot — my 100th neck collared goose. I was able to reach a milestone and
was thankful and blessed to celebrate this with my good friend and hunting
partner.
As a young kid I was able to fish for huge, wild steelhead in a nearby river
that no longer sees steelhead return. I grew up hunting giant blacktail bucks so
rutty and pl entiful in the foothills of Mount Hood. Pheasants were everywhere.
Mule deer were huge and plentiful all over Eastern Oregon. Today—whether
it’s pheasants, steelhead or big bucks—the populations aren’t what they used
to be. Because there are more people and less habitat I catch myself reminisc-
ing about the “good old days” of yesterday. As an avid outdoorsman, I take so-
lace in knowing that there are still exceptions, and field hunting for Canada
geese is much like the 100th neck-collared goose I shot. It’s a shining exception
to one of my many pursuits. I take comfort knowing that we are living in the
good old days right now. Throughout the West, thankfully, goose numbers are
high and hunting opportunities are vast.
From the dark ages of days gone by, goose hunting techniques have come a
long way. I can still remember reading advice from waterfowlers that the key to
success was to set up decoys to draw geese close enough to shoot. I remember
thinking there had to be more to it, and I refused to settle for this simple advice.
It was time to question conventional wisdom, and like a handful of others, I did
what I could to change that situation.
There were times in recent history where goose numbers were much higher
than they are now, and there was less hunting pressure, yet the hope was just to
lure a few geese to gunning range. Now it’s very...Subscribe to read more...
www.westernhuntingjournal.com
75