Another great video. Most of the time in my duck hunting group, my buddies ask me what could have worked better and my responses are just quotes from your videos.
I always called it the flying chuckle as opposed to an actual feeding mallard sound. They are different. Live duck observation is the best teacher. Your backward practice is a good way to get technique down indoors without as much noise. Like dry firing.👍👍
Not really, we sometimes use goose decoys but not often. We try to run big spreads with loud calling and spinners so being seen is not typically a problem. Bigger decoys can't hurt in my opinion but dakotas run pretty big. Id say they are the perfect size. Pretty big but still small enough to carry a bunch
@@ChasingGreen gotcha gotcha, we hunt on the ky lake and all the mallards just seem to be migrating and or not seeing our spread so I was thinking about getting some of the bigger decoys.
@mega-donplayz3785 generally in my experience if your running 100+ decoys with spinners and calling, they know your there. If there not reacting to that about the only thing I've had success with is going even bigger. Double the spread size...make sure you got wind though. Generally won't work on calm days
@@ChasingGreen yeah that makes since. Problem with that is we only have a few dozen decoys, two spinners, and a pulsator…. So I figured getting the bigger decoys would help since we don’t have a whole lot of decoys like what you’re saying.
@@ChasingGreen I did make a jerk cord like the one you showed in one of your videos, I figured getting that splash and motion might help with getting them to see the decoys
Another great video. Most of the time in my duck hunting group, my buddies ask me what could have worked better and my responses are just quotes from your videos.
Ahh yes! Been waiting on these type videos to ramp back up!
Hoping to have weeklys back going starting today
I always called it the flying chuckle as opposed to an actual feeding mallard sound. They are different. Live duck observation is the best teacher. Your backward practice is a good way to get technique down indoors without as much noise. Like dry firing.👍👍
Chasing Green, great video keep up the amazing work
Appreciate it!
Another great one as always
Thanks!
Do you use any kind of bigger decoys to decoy ducks that are farther away? For example magnum or battleship decoys from Higdon?
Not really, we sometimes use goose decoys but not often. We try to run big spreads with loud calling and spinners so being seen is not typically a problem. Bigger decoys can't hurt in my opinion but dakotas run pretty big. Id say they are the perfect size. Pretty big but still small enough to carry a bunch
@@ChasingGreen gotcha gotcha, we hunt on the ky lake and all the mallards just seem to be migrating and or not seeing our spread so I was thinking about getting some of the bigger decoys.
@mega-donplayz3785 generally in my experience if your running 100+ decoys with spinners and calling, they know your there. If there not reacting to that about the only thing I've had success with is going even bigger. Double the spread size...make sure you got wind though. Generally won't work on calm days
@@ChasingGreen yeah that makes since. Problem with that is we only have a few dozen decoys, two spinners, and a pulsator…. So I figured getting the bigger decoys would help since we don’t have a whole lot of decoys like what you’re saying.
@@ChasingGreen I did make a jerk cord like the one you showed in one of your videos, I figured getting that splash and motion might help with getting them to see the decoys
GOOD STUFF !!!!!!!!!
Appreciate it!
👍