Aggressive Timber Duck Calling
Timber hunting for mallards and
other puddle ducks can be some of the most exciting wing shooting a
waterfowler can get. In this
article I will discuss what I have learned that has drastically improved
my timber calling skills.
1) Be an aggressive caller to kill
more ducks in the timber.
When most people think of timber
calling, they think of food chuckles and single clucks. Take timber
calling to a whole new level, a level I call aggressive timber calling.
Aggressive timber calling is sounding like 20 demanding hen mallards, at
a volume level appropriate to the timber environment you are
hunting.
2)
Volume is your best friend and your worst enemy
When in the timber, volume is your
best friend and your enemy. Each and every note you make echo's off both
the water and the trees, magnifying any mistakes and good cadences you
might make in the excitement of circling mallards. This is no time for
20 note highballs using the latest and greatest competition call.
Instead, use the nastiest, duckiest timber call you own. A call like the
raspy
talker in your favorite material makes an excellent timber call. The
Raspy Talker always sounds like a raspy and snotty duck.
3) The more good calling the better
My experience with duck calling is
that the more good calling, the better. And the timber is no different.
When I say good, I mean good. The timber is no time for a rookie to be
playing his new toy. Allot of poor calling is a great conservation tool,
but allot of good calling is a great harvest tool. The reason good
calling in the timber is so important is because many times your decoy
spread is small or hidden by the surrounding trees and vegetation. All
you have to convince the mallards to decoy is your call.
4) Call as a team
I generally hunt in a group, and
refer to the callers in the group as the team. Our team generally starts
off calling with extremely fast hen greeting calls. If the birds respond
and start coming closer, our team will transition into a rapid food
chuckle mixed in with some quacks. If they start to slide just lean on
them with a rapid food chuckle and feeding clucks, and toss out a rapid
hen greeting if needed.
Conclusion-Once
committed in the timber, mallards usually finish into very close range
as the holes you are hunting are not large and limits come quick as the
shots are hard to miss. I hope this article encouraged you to play a
snotty hen mallard call in the timber and to lean on those mallards with
aggressive timber calling. You and your favorite retriever will not
regret it.
For
more goose and duck hunting tips please read other articles located at duck
and goose hunting tips.
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