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BEST Tips for Hiding while Duck and Goose Hunting | What's Important!

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ก.ย. 2021
  • On this video Joel his top tips for staying hidden from waterfowl! This is most hunter's biggest problem. Get Surviving Duck Season MERCH!! survivingduckseason.com/mercha...
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    www.SurvivingDuckSeason.com
    Joel Strickland (@mrproducersir) is a lifelong waterfowler, duck hunting guide and producer/director in the film and television industry.
    Thanks for checking out this video! If you enjoyed it, please give us a like and subscribe to this channel.
    Surviving Duck Season is a first of its kind waterfowling TH-cam Channel. We're feeding your obsession and helping you to maximize your experience. Our team is comprised of individuals from across the country who hunt every day of duck season. The waterfowler's lifestyle is more than just duck hunting, and on our channel we have lots of different types of content: Duck and goose hunting videos, cooking, DIY projects, reviews and suggestions on products and gear, and of course lots of tips and tactics. Every week of the year we drop at least one piece of content, so you will always have great waterfowling content to watch, at any time of the year!
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    How to Hide from ducks and geese
    #DuckHuntingTips #DuckHunting #SurvivingDuckSeason

ความคิดเห็น • 76

  • @SurvivingDuckSeason
    @SurvivingDuckSeason  2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    What's your best tip for staying hidden?

    • @hardcase965
      @hardcase965 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Motion. The less the better

    • @swamptosoundadventures8337
      @swamptosoundadventures8337 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      What he said….NEVER move until it’s time to shoot except rolling your eyes to watch the birds

    • @tylersGBO
      @tylersGBO 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      If you’re not the caller, get down and look down. Often I will squat and watch the guy calling. See where his eyes are when he says to shoot you know which direction to go.

    • @patrickgjorven7832
      @patrickgjorven7832 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Don't move and move slowly with a purpose if you need to.

    • @RetrieverTrainingAlone
      @RetrieverTrainingAlone 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Stillness and low profile. I use a jet sled which allows me low profile in shallow water. Up here in interior Alaska I get close shooting in a white parka as we have lots of swans. As long as I lay in the jet sled and don't move, the ducks don't flare and I get close shots. My favorite load is 1 1/8 oz of 2s steel. Our season is in Sept so the ducks are less responsive to calling and I don't call, and don't move. Also hide cross-wind to the decoys so the ducks are not working directly at you when they are coming into the wind. I almost always hunt solo which also helps hiding. Shotgun is painted the same color are our mud.

  • @travisthompson6543
    @travisthompson6543 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for another good one Joel. You touched on not moving. That is HUGE!! I remember my dads buddy getting mad at me and swatting my arm every time I would point and say, "there's one!" I was a bit offended at first but then he introduced me to the clock method. We established a landmark and set it as twelve o'clock. Then when a bird or a flock was spotted it was whispered, "one at 4 o'clock!" Or what ever time it related to the imaginary clock. No more arms waving out of the blind.
    I have also been toying with taking a drone out and getting a bird eye view of the blind to see how hidden we really are.

    • @SurvivingDuckSeason
      @SurvivingDuckSeason  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      When you can look at your hunting location from the air, it’s a game changer!

  • @kross1261
    @kross1261 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great advise. Get/make a Great hide and DON’T move. Seems pretty basic but too many fail to do this. Learned after many years of hunting my goose pit where I’m hunting traffic most the time and with smart late season honkers if you’re hide and setup isn’t perfect you’re usually out of luck. One thing that I’ve found when hunting in layout blinds is to try and put the blinds on the downwind side of a hill if possible. So when the geese or duck come they’re not looking at the silhouette/outline of your blinds so easily.

  • @TheChancerdog1
    @TheChancerdog1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Amen the hide is right under scouting in importance. What I spend late summer doing is finding grass I like to fill in on the boat, a frame and layouts. I really think blending common natural grasses from your area is way more important than any decoy type or call type there is

  • @rimrock53
    @rimrock53 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You missed an important one. When the sum is shining, the direction of the sun and shadows can make hiding much harder and color, movement, etc much more critical. Try not to get the sun on your face. The sun can also make your blind stand out if it doesn’t match the surroundings. Watch your shadows. Early on a sunny day, your shadow can magnify any movements.

  • @matthewwalters303
    @matthewwalters303 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great information. I really enjoy your content!

  • @scottgarbs7761
    @scottgarbs7761 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hi Joel, One thing about camo outerwear in unblinded settings. If you're hunting by yourself and not really close to other groups wear what you want. When you're hunting in proximity to others it's your responsibility to camo yourself the best you can......whether you think it matters or not. The reason I say this is waterfowl will flare from one hunter just as vigorously as they will flare from multiple hunters. As a member of a hunting group each of us has a duty to our hunting mates as well as nearby groups. I think you will agree that if someone shows up in seasoned, brown-duck carhartts hunting in buckbrush and smartweed scatters and the ducks flare for some unknown reason, the carhartts are likely going to be mentioned in the discussion whether they are a factor or not.

  • @chrishill3595
    @chrishill3595 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I know this off topic but do you have any videos or could you make a video that's involves hunting wood ducks? I live in sc and that's mainly what we hunt in the swamps.

  • @swamptosoundadventures8337
    @swamptosoundadventures8337 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    What you’re saying about the wind makes perfect sense but it’s so much more fun to shoot and even just see ducks coming straight at u than crossing 😭😩

  • @kraigkaatz6858
    @kraigkaatz6858 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Another great video... very good information and reminder of the importance of concealment... God Bless

  • @graydoncarruth5044
    @graydoncarruth5044 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I would offer one contrary opinion on scouting vs concealment. If you are hunting a property you know like the back of your hand and know the ducks habits over the years then concealment is number 1,2,3 and 20.

  • @danpatrick9080
    @danpatrick9080 ปีที่แล้ว

    I'll be boat hunting some deep water this season. Do you recommend a camo life jacket for the lab?

  • @G31mR
    @G31mR ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I agree: concealment is the most common fault of duck hunters I see in the marsh. If I can see you, the ducks can see you.
    Here are my best tips: As far as being in the duck's line-of-sight, if you can see the duck, you are in the duck's line of sight. Unlike you and me, ducks can see directly to their side, and even to their rear. You are always in a duck's line-of-sight, unless you are directly behind the bird. I would also advise the waterfowl hunter to cover his/her hands and face. Bare skin stands out, even in the shade, like nothing else....especially if it moves.

  • @DaddyDuck365
    @DaddyDuck365 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video brother…….

  • @wafflebird0076
    @wafflebird0076 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hey so I just watched your why soak game meat video and I’m new to duck hunting and I would like to know what to do to the meat right after cutting it from the duck like what to do before throwing it in the freezer

    • @SurvivingDuckSeason
      @SurvivingDuckSeason  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      get the feathers off it, rinse it off and pat dry with a paper towel and put it in a plastic bag and freeze it.

  • @bviager
    @bviager 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Any tips for public land where you have to hunt a blind that everyone uses and has beat all the brush away from? PS we can't cut any vegetation legally to re-brush them

  • @jeremybreeden77
    @jeremybreeden77 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video Joel! How are the lengths on the pullovers? I ask because I'm 6'4" and with some clothing it will turn into a midriff shirt when I raise my arms. I would have to say limiting movement is the best way to stay hidden. I've seen ducks land in decoys many times when someone was out adjusting them or what not and as long as they get the warning not to move in advance, sometimes they will work like the person is not even there.

    • @SurvivingDuckSeason
      @SurvivingDuckSeason  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      They are sized proportionally. I have some tall buddies who got em last year and love theirs.

    • @jeremybreeden77
      @jeremybreeden77 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@SurvivingDuckSeason Thanks for the info!

  • @powderhogg01
    @powderhogg01 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    my area is in a severe drought, and a lot of the lakes and marshes have pulled way back. how would you go about setting up to hunt birds that are in water thats surrounded by dry lake bed or mud flats that have relatively no cover? ive been thinking a layout blind covered in the mud??

    • @SurvivingDuckSeason
      @SurvivingDuckSeason  2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I've dealt with that problem a few times. We have dragged tree tops, logs and branches out to the water edge and then hidden in that before... worked well. Layouts with mud on them would probably work too in early to mid season.

    • @RetrieverTrainingAlone
      @RetrieverTrainingAlone 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Here in interior Alaska where we have lots of swans I layout in the mudflat in a white parka with a few swan decoys...using a jet sled so I can layout in a few inches of water. My lab is usually behind me in his jet sled so he does not suffer from muzzle blast and is hidden back in the shrubs:th-cam.com/video/PcNiZrMRNW0/w-d-xo.html

    • @powderhogg01
      @powderhogg01 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@SurvivingDuckSeason thanks for the tips! as always, love the channel and all the tips you offer up. keep up the awesome content creation, love it

  • @gooseflatwaterfowlers
    @gooseflatwaterfowlers 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I think you’ve got to use natural cover make it look like a ball of brush. When I have permanent blinds I use hog panel on the outside to put FastGrass as a base layer of brush then I fill in with Blackjack Oak limbs and Cedars make it natural then I live them on there and let the vines and weeds run all over it and it naturally brushes itself then cover out shooting ports. I use tank netting over the top to break up silhouettes on the ground. When I hunt dry fields I always get stubble from at least 100 yards away to brush blinds geese get skiddish seeing a big bare spot and to me it don’t look natural. When I start working ducks if I’m in a blind I always squat down and get as low as possible so I’m in the shadows so I can look up and watch them work as I call. It’s something my dad has always done and I guess I inherited doing that. I don’t mud my blind I usually spray it with a drab color spray paint in spots then I put grass kits on it and spot that as well. One thing I think that gets overlooked as the season goes on is to add fresh brush to your blind to keep blind as “brushy” as possible. Camo clothes I think you need to match your surroundings like you wouldn’t wear a marsh/cornfield type pattern in the timber if it was real bright I’d go more drab and dark and vice-versa. The bottom line is to get hidden and still and that makes your probability of success go up in hunting.

  • @clinte9897
    @clinte9897 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Brushing is kinda like firewood, as soon as you think you have enough, double it 👍

    • @Laughinghawg
      @Laughinghawg ปีที่แล้ว

      Agree 100%, seen too many buddies get lazy when it comes to brushing up blinds

  • @isaacmarlin2000
    @isaacmarlin2000 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I’ve noticed y’all hunt specks and I’m a beginner and there isn’t very many videos on the internet to learn how to blow a speck call I would appreciate it if you could give us a how to

    • @SurvivingDuckSeason
      @SurvivingDuckSeason  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      You're not the only person who's requested this! lol It's on my list.

  • @Billy_Bullish
    @Billy_Bullish 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Did that story about cache involve John Nannemann? I’d love to mess with the old man about it.

    • @SurvivingDuckSeason
      @SurvivingDuckSeason  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      LOL no, that was before I met John! Haven't seen John in a while, hope he's doing well.

  • @mrr7678
    @mrr7678 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Amen
    Hide hide hide
    It’s the key to the kingdom 👍

  • @keithlonglois6274
    @keithlonglois6274 ปีที่แล้ว

    Damn this is good stuff and I am late to the game. I'm just tossing this out there. Waterfowl have eyes on the the side of their head. If you have duck hunted any length of time I know you have seen this, especially of stale birds. They will circle and circle and eventually will come right over the top of your blind, turn their head to the side, and look right down in on you. I too prefer a little cross on the wind, but it may not be so bad for the birds to come straight it. It is my opinion that their eyesight is limited straight on, and better on the sides. Just take one by the bill and look at this straight on, then rotate him around. Besides that, they can pretty much turn their head anyway they want too. .... Be still #1. Next, rather than coming up "quick and jerky." Come up smooth. Just ease up and shoulder the gun in one smooth movement.
    Once we got on the birds in the middle of a lake. There was a bare sand hump about six inches out of the water, due to a draw down. It was maybe twenty feet around. Ankle deep grass for acres. No cover. We set the deeks so that the ducks would set up, pass in front of us, but light up twenty yards or so past us. We put life preservers under us for padding, and laid flat on our backs in a pin wheel pattern, heads in the middle nearly touching. That way, we could talk to each other as the bids worked, and had eyes 360. Nobody had to move. We called the shot after most of the birds passed, and shot them in the butt. Now, one guy was on the "off side" of the pin wheel away from the birds. We were all seasoned and mature hunters and it took discipline to stay in your zone. The off guy either got the late birds in or the flares out. Careful not to go over the top of the other two guys. We swapped positions of course. But the off position guy was key to talking the birds in for the other two.

  • @robertorrison6664
    @robertorrison6664 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Cross wind is the best tip Lots of times the ducks never even flair when you stand up

  • @jessecampbell7432
    @jessecampbell7432 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Hey joel. Do y’all offer a military discount for merch? Thanks

    • @SurvivingDuckSeason
      @SurvivingDuckSeason  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Sorry no. The purpose of the merch is to give people an opportunity to help support this channel- so we can offset some of the expenses to produce the content. Thank you for your service.

    • @ray7909
      @ray7909 ปีที่แล้ว

      special boy

  • @aaronsnatic2446
    @aaronsnatic2446 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Like the old Cajun said, brush the blind and when you done do it again about 3 more times!!!!

  • @davidharris5265
    @davidharris5265 ปีที่แล้ว

    I hunt just a mile from the cash river!! Small world!

  • @hankdausman8653
    @hankdausman8653 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Staying still and being hidden are equally important. Birds see movement more than anything else.

  • @troymitchell1747
    @troymitchell1747 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Ok now public land. Where I live you can’t make a permanent structure. Portable blinds?

    • @SurvivingDuckSeason
      @SurvivingDuckSeason  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      most public areas are that way. Yes portable blinds, or creating make-shift blinds like described in the video.

  • @RetrieverTrainingAlone
    @RetrieverTrainingAlone 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Here in interior Alaska where we have lots of swans I layout in the mudflat in a white parka with a few swan decoys...using a jet sled so I can layout in a few inches of water. My lab is usually behind me in his jet sled so he does not suffer from muzzle blast and is hidden back in the shrubs:th-cam.com/video/PcNiZrMRNW0/w-d-xo.html

  • @ksoutdoorsports
    @ksoutdoorsports 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Your hide can never be good enough for sure!

  • @mobowyer4131
    @mobowyer4131 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Keep still and keep your face hidden, it seems to glow in early morning light

  • @jimmorwood9715
    @jimmorwood9715 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Common sense