Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 12

Thread: Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honkers

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Posts
    1,122

    Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honkers

    I had a farm opportunity get canceled on Saturday so while everyone else was watching the Superbowl a buddy and I decided to try Boundary for Canadas.

    My previous experience with Canadas there was they were entirely random so to give this a good try we both packed sleds with silos, shells and foamies and dragged them both to the beach where we hoped the visibility would give the honkers a reason to check it out. Previously I had been advised that no one really decoys on Boundary but this year after committing to the bay I've shown this is wrong - decoying, at least for ducks - does work and the extra effort pays dividends. However, for Canadas I found their movements fairly random and except for a spectacular opening day last year was not expecting much.

    We didn't make daybreak so may have missed the morning flight but by 8 we were set up a couple hundred meters onto the bare beach. We arrayed silos all around us and hunkered down under canvas hoping the decoys would take eyes away from us. However. from set up for the next several hours it was a bluebird day - except for ducks! I've never had ducks ignore two humans in the open as much as this day. I don't know whether to credit our camouflage or the goose decoys but we had ducks fly well within shooting distance, unwavering, directly cupping to get to the water a hundred meters from us. While we were waiting in vain for Canadas ducks and Brant happily fed near by. Even standing up to stretch our legs they were complacent. Maybe they knew the calendar??

    In any case, we were there for geese and except for far off flights we were resigned to chalking this up as a learning exercise until ... a small group of Canadas coasted into the foreshore. We started blowing calls like crazy but my inexperienced calling did not meet their standards. The Canadas surely saw us but were more concerned with strutting the edge of the foreshore, getting up and checking out the pond by the Howeling Nursery or picking up entirely and flying out to the airport. But they kept returning to the edge of the foreshore. There was even one time that a couple paired off and began vigorously humping it up. What a tease!

    With the day going long and no indication they would ever decide to check out our static setup, we devised a plan. One of us would get up and start walking the beach in plain sight. The other would make a big circle and use the cover of the foreshore - the logs and depressions - to sneak up on them from the other side. Between the two of us we hoped to flush the birds one way or another hoping the honkers would not go off to the sides. So after agreeing to the plan and talking about timing, we abandoned our decoys and executed our plan.

    I chose to be the sneak and nonchalantly walked back to the foreshore keeping an eye on the position of the group. Meanwhile, my partner stood up and began walking in a straight line down the beach trying to angle slightly closer so that we could both benefit by the squeeze play. Once I reached the foreshore I got low and began doing my best impression of a commando. I picked my way through the sticks and mud, occasionally peering up to see where my buddy was at and more importantly where the geese were. The geese seemed somewhat alerted but I hoped more because of my buddy out in the open.

    After ten minutes of creeping my middle aged back was crying out for a result but thankfully I had made it to a position behind a log partially shielded by its roots. Just as I reached it, the geese finally became concerned and began stirring. I got up and started blasting. My first shot had no effect but as soon as the leaders launched into the air my next shot took down two in one. The flight scattered and headed toward the open water - where my buddy was waiting. He was able to account for one which sent the flight circling back again toward me. Unfortunately, even with a great opportunity I only managed to pepper another which kept on going.

    It wasn't over yet as the two I put down were still alive and were running for it. It took a few minutes of running before both of us were able to track down the big Canadas. Even after giving them a whirl, one of them got up after I put it down with my stuff and I was forced to go after it second time like it was a lost fumble. This time I brained it with my knife. But walking back the second one also got up and tried to make it into the air but this time I reloaded, took aim at its head and put it down for certain. The crazy thing was that these shenanigans attracted a trio of Canadas right into our setup - finally - but I had my hands full so these late comers got a pass.

    A very slow day made into a great one because our ape brains came up with a plan that the bird brains couldn't figure out. I still don't know if they saw me coming up at them from the foreshore and couldn't decide how to get out of our 'pincer movement' or maybe my commando skills kept me hidden until the last moment. It was a lot of work and even harder packing them all out in sleds with all of our gear. It was my buddy's first Canada. I hope his second one is much easier.
    Last edited by silveragent; 02-14-2022 at 08:23 AM.

  2. Site Sponsor

  3. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Agassiz
    Posts
    467

    Re: Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honk

    We call it "playing dumb farmer". One or two will hide out of sight in the direction we think/hope the geese will fly and the other goes for a walk to "herd the geese in the direction of the hidden hunters. You don't walk directly towards them but at an angle so they hopefully just start to walk at first. and you don't want to look at them, just glances to know what they are doing. Many times the chaser gets close enough to shoot.
    I got 4 big Canadas that way once.
    Sometimes they fly where you want them to and sometimes not.
    My wife pushed snows for us once this year and got plenty close enough to hammer them, but she didn't have her licence this year. Next year she will!

  4. #3
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Posts
    1,247

    Re: Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honk

    Pushes are quite common when it comes to hunting,,,,,,,especially with pheasant and deer hunting.

  5. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Posts
    1,122

    Re: Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honk

    Yea but I never thought it would work with geese. I've never had much luck jumping them so was a first time being successful for me.

  6. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Posts
    1,122

    Re: Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honk

    Quote Originally Posted by Farmer View Post
    \
    My wife pushed snows for us once this year and got plenty close enough to hammer them, but she didn't have her licence this year. Next year she will!
    I wonder if they would have let someone come so close if that person was holding a gun. I often wonder if they can distinguish between people at the park wearing colorful every day clothes and hunters in camo with guns.

  7. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Agassiz
    Posts
    467

    Re: Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honk

    Quote Originally Posted by silveragent View Post
    I wonder if they would have let someone come so close if that person was holding a gun. I often wonder if they can distinguish between people at the park wearing colorful every day clothes and hunters in camo with guns.
    As I noted in my original post, I got close enough with my gun and dog on a leash to down 4 last year or the year before. With Canadas you have to ignore them as you move towards them or they get really nervous.
    I have never been the pusher on snows . The one time my wife pushed snows, they got up and landed again and she got close enough again before they left. We never got a shot that day.
    We knocked down 4 or five a few days before and had to go get a couple that landed a ways out. We walked out to get them and got close enough to the flock that had landed again in the field. We ended up with our limit of 10 snows and one cackler. We could have shot more as there were still some in the field and others flying over.

  8. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Posts
    1,247

    Re: Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honk

    ^^^^ Sounds like it works some days, not so much on others! Btw, snow goose limit is 15 per day down here on the coast. You could have kept whackin'em! lol

  9. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Agassiz
    Posts
    467

    Re: Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honk

    Quote Originally Posted by mastercaster View Post
    ^^^^ Sounds like it works some days, not so much on others! Btw, snow goose limit is 15 per day down here on the coast. You could have kept whackin'em! lol
    Not on the north side of the river. We only have a 5 snow limit. Don't ask me why, I don't know.

  10. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Posts
    1,247

    Re: Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honk

    ^^^^Thanks for pointing that out. Have only hunted them in the other area where it's 15.

  11. #10
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Location
    Burnaby
    Posts
    2,228

    Re: Ape Brain > Bird Brain! Slow day on the beach turned into spot and stalk for honk

    Quote Originally Posted by silveragent View Post
    I had a farm opportunity get canceled on Saturday so while everyone else was watching the Superbowl a buddy and I decided to try Boundary for Canadas.

    My previous experience with Canadas there was they were entirely random so to give this a good try we both packed sleds with silos, shells and foamies and dragged them both to the beach where we hoped the visibility would give the honkers a reason to check it out. Previously I had been advised that no one really decoys on Boundary but this year after committing to the bay I've shown this is wrong - decoying, at least for ducks - does work and the extra effort pays dividends. However, for Canadas I found their movements fairly random and except for a spectacular opening day last year was not expecting much.

    We didn't make daybreak so may have missed the morning flight but by 8 we were set up a couple hundred meters onto the bare beach. We arrayed silos all around us and hunkered down under canvas hoping the decoys would take eyes away from us. However. from set up for the next several hours it was a bluebird day - except for ducks! I've never had ducks ignore two humans in the open as much as this day. I don't know whether to credit our camouflage or the goose decoys but we had ducks fly well within shooting distance, unwavering, directly cupping to get to the water a hundred meters from us. While we were waiting in vain for Canadas ducks and Brant happily fed near by. Even standing up to stretch our legs they were complacent. Maybe they knew the calendar??

    In any case, we were there for geese and except for far off flights we were resigned to chalking this up as a learning exercise until ... a small group of Canadas coasted into the foreshore. We started blowing calls like crazy but my inexperienced calling did not meet their standards. The Canadas surely saw us but were more concerned with strutting the edge of the foreshore, getting up and checking out the pond by the Howeling Nursery or picking up entirely and flying out to the airport. But they kept returning to the edge of the foreshore. There was even one time that a couple paired off and began vigorously humping it up. What a tease!

    With the day going long and no indication they would ever decide to check out our static setup, we devised a plan. One of us would get up and start walking the beach in plain sight. The other would make a big circle and use the cover of the foreshore - the logs and depressions - to sneak up on them from the other side. Between the two of us we hoped to flush the birds one way or another hoping the honkers would not go off to the sides. So after agreeing to the plan and talking about timing, we abandoned our decoys and executed our plan.

    I chose to be the sneak and nonchalantly walked back to the foreshore keeping an eye on the position of the group. Meanwhile, my partner stood up and began walking in a straight line down the beach trying to angle slightly closer so that we could both benefit by the squeeze play. Once I reached the foreshore I got low and began doing my best impression of a commando. I picked my way through the sticks and mud, occasionally peering up to see where my buddy was at and more importantly where the geese were. The geese seemed somewhat alerted but I hoped more because of my buddy out in the open.

    After ten minutes of creeping my middle aged back was crying out for a result but thankfully I had made it to a position behind a log partially shielded by its roots. Just as I reached it, the geese finally became concerned and began stirring. I got up and started blasting. My first shot had no effect but as soon as the leaders launched into the air my next shot took down two in one. The flight scattered and headed toward the open water - where my buddy was waiting. He was able to account for one which sent the flight circling back again toward me. Unfortunately, even with a great opportunity I only managed to pepper another which kept on going.

    It wasn't over yet as the two I put down were still alive and were running for it. It took a few minutes of running before both of us were able to track down the big Canadas. Even after giving them a whirl, one of them got up after I put it down with my stuff and I was forced to go after it second time like it was a lost fumble. This time I brained it with my knife. But walking back the second one also got up and tried to make it into the air but this time I reloaded, took aim at its head and put it down for certain. The crazy thing was that these shenanigans attracted a trio of Canadas right into our setup - finally - but I had my hands full so these late comers got a pass.

    A very slow day made into a great one because our ape brains came up with a plan that the bird brains couldn't figure out. I still don't know if they saw me coming up at them from the foreshore and couldn't decide how to get out of our 'pincer movement' or maybe my commando skills kept me hidden until the last moment. It was a lot of work and even harder packing them all out in sleds with all of our gear. It was my buddy's first Canada. I hope his second one is much easier.
    Great read!
    I love spot and stalk waterfowling more than calling them into decoys.


    Have you been out since you wrote this up? I was out on the bay Saturday and didn’t see a single goose flying.
    If it cant be done with one shot, it shouldn't be done.

    "grab large claw hammer - put against butt cheek , pry head out of ass with claws...then go back to school..."

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •