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Beard
11-29-2012, 08:37 PM
went out with my buddy today for a morning hunt. we got there just after the sun came up and the water was still with not much movement. We waited for a couple hours in the tall grass and as the rain and wind came the ducks followed. We left around lunch time with 12 or 13 birds between the two of us. On was a really nice pin. With the way the morning started we thought it was going to be a slow day. Was definitely a great time to be out. Those weekday hunts when you can get away from work are what its all about!

J-Man
11-29-2012, 08:47 PM
Last Friday morn was the same, dead until 9:30/10 am. Then group after group. To bad I had to leave at 10:30, and no one else hunting. Took 2 mallards and a solo snow in 30 min and had to pickup. Just watching them come in on the walk back.

xtrail
12-03-2012, 08:28 PM
Can somebody help me out, Where is hunting open for the public in Ladner? I want to hunt ducks and I looked on the Fraser Vally Special Area Hunting Licence map and I couldn't seem to figure it out, could somebody pm me or just post the directions for me. Also is ladner open all week or is it like the pitt marsh where its only open saturdays, sundays, and wednesdays? I'm planning on going tommorrow so could somebody please help me out. Thanks so much!

sparkes3
12-03-2012, 10:12 PM
you have mail and its open all the time

Freshtracks
12-03-2012, 10:28 PM
Most hunting in Ladner Marsh I believe is done by boat/punt. Anyone new, should try and go with someone experienced ... IMHO. Launching can be done @ Captains Cove launch or Wellington Point Park, on River Rd. W., just past SM Products.

sparkes3
12-04-2012, 05:50 PM
lots of walking area to hunt at the end of river road in ladner did it for a few years always got ducks and a few geese as well

J-Man
12-04-2012, 06:38 PM
Mule right now the morning tide floods the Marsh (13.5 ish high tide) , make sure to check tide tables. You can only walk and hunt if the tide is 10.5 feet or less, otherwise its a very dangerous area. There are ditches carved out by ocean, some up to 5+ deep and 2 feet across. When the water is level (about 10 foot) looking down they look like puddles, but you can easily go right under. You add 1 foot to that they disappear and its a drowning hazard to most people. I would suggest you first head out and walk the marsh on a 6 foot or less tide. You will be able to spot the ditches carved out, or go out with someone that has hunted the area quite a bit. Also I suggest a walking stick to probe any water logged areas. I've gone down in a few of these ditches they come out of no where sometimes. I'll probably be out Sat or Sun for the evening hunt since the mornings are boat only now.

Dano
12-04-2012, 07:09 PM
Good advice J-Man.
Dano

Freshtracks
12-04-2012, 09:27 PM
lots of walking area to hunt at the end of river road in ladner did it for a few years always got ducks and a few geese as well

sparkes3 .... The area you refer to is called Brunswick Point, south of Canoe Pass (some use that reference) and north of Roberts Bank Superport.

I believe J-man might be referring to here also. :confused: Great place to hunt. But one better know the tides and wind, as well as the lay of the marsh and where any ditches are located. Spent many a day having great shoots there.

J-Man
12-04-2012, 11:04 PM
Yea Robert's Point (south of Canoe Pass) I think the sign says at the end of River Rd, that's the place I typically refer to as the marsh. So my post was referring to that area, not actual Ladner Marsh off of Mcneelys Way and Ferry Rd.

MFERGIE
12-05-2012, 07:48 AM
Solid advice J Man! Always a great idea to know the tides in this area before heading out for a walk. Easy walk out on a low tide and a bitch of a swim back on a high tide...the ocean carved ditches will be deep and sticky on a high tide, I recommend taking a walking stick and using it to check your crossings as you head back. Always a good idea to remember if your wearing chest waders to be wary of "going in over your chest"....ive seen plenty of strong guys get stuck in a cross ditch including myself. Good luck and safe hunting!

dak0ta
12-05-2012, 08:20 AM
yeah watch those pits.. i walked into one last year and fortunately got stuck only up to my thighs, but since it's so muddy and you're sinking every time you move your legs, you got to be careful. Out of nowhere, you just sink in. Shotgun was a good leverage to get out.

Andrewh
12-05-2012, 09:33 AM
A buddy walked into one last year at high tide at the marsh on the end of 72nd....Full front float with submerged gun! I had a really good chuckle after he crawled out with filled waders, could have just as easily been me if I was in the lead. It can be a deadly combo though, waders + deep water = high drowning potential.

Andrew

Beard
12-05-2012, 11:51 AM
yea my buddy is taller then me so always walks ahead. I have had to pull him out a couple of times now, one of the times he went in pretty low and it was tough getting out.

heyblast
12-05-2012, 05:38 PM
Never hunted Ladner but it sounds like a life jacket might be a good idea along with a walking stick.

CRS
12-05-2012, 09:24 PM
Never hunted Ladner but it sounds like a life jacket might be a good idea along with a walking stick.
Agreed. I have a few old ski poles that I use when fishing rivers just to "test the waters" and have been surprised a few times when the little puddle was 6' deep. Plus the poles float and can be had fairly cheap at garage sales!

Kudu
12-06-2012, 07:33 AM
Part 1..........

For all the "neoprene wader" duck hunters - here is a bit of usefull information for you all!

If you dont bellieve the article, let me know - I have a pool in my back garden, you are more than welcome to come and put this theory to the test - I know I have - and I'm not posting from the pearly gates - or the bottom of the pool!..... :-D





Exploding the Killer Wader Myth



http://www.sexyloops.com/images2/rivercrossing.jpg

Although I wear my neoprenes most of the time ('because they're kinky') I don't happen to get them wet very often. Frankly unless I'm river fishing or float tubing or presented with some otherwise insurmountable stillwater challenge I like to keep them dry. This is because wading spooks fish.

However, I am not going to write about that, I have already done so in the past, what I am going to write about is the Killer Wader Myth. Actually Myths. Because there are two of them.

The myths

The first myth is that if you were to unexpectedly fall into a lake, your waders would fill up with water and drag you down to the bottom so as to drown you (because everyone knows that the water inside your waders is always heavier than the water outside)

The second interestingly, takes on a completely different angle.

This one states that if you were to unexpectedly fall into (assumedly) the same lake, your waders, instead of filling up with water, would actually fill up with air, and flip you upside-down and leave you suspended from the surface (like a very large suspender buzzer)!!!Now I know that these two scenarios are both hilariously ludicrous, or at least they would be if they weren't taken so seriously. (You don't believe that anyone actually takes them seriously?

Then tell me: why do most fisheries ban chest waders from being worn in boats?

This is especially ridiculous when you consider that wearing chest waders would more likely save lives that lose them).I for one would rather float around a cold lake wearing my waders. The neoprene helps you float, and any other sort just helps to keep you warm. Abandon sinking ship? Bung on a life jacket and waders. Hang on a mo! There is the tragic story of two anglers drowning on a stream mouth on Lake Taupo. Waders were blamed. But what actually happened here was that they tried to swim against the current and the resistance of the water flowing into their waders caused them to look like they were being dragged down.

They should have gone with the flow, and when they were clear of it, gently swum back to shore.But this is all just theoretical stuff. The sort of thing that looks good in text books, but what use is it for you and I? We're practical people: mountain men, fly fishers; we who have the wind in our hair, dirt on our hands, steel in our hearts, strange far off looks in our eyes, eyes that have seen much - too much maybe. What is needed is hard-core proof! Throw away the text books. Let's put our waders on and jump in the pool.

For this is the only way to discover life's sweet secret dreams.And with this stuff spinning around my head I took it upon myself to attempt to recreate the Killer Wader Myth in a swimming pool. I have said it before and I'll say it again: The Paul Arden Fly Fishing Experience will take you places you never knew existed, because that's who I am and that's what I do.

The four tasks.

So I set myself four tasks: (1) to recreate KWM scenario where waders fill up with unreasonably heavy water and drag me frantically struggling (I assume) to the pool bottom, where I will be able to walk around for a little while and (2) to recreate KWM scenario where waders fill up with air and suspend my feet from the surface, which should hopefully give me a whole new perspective on existence and (3) to flip a float tube over so my girlfriend can get a good shot of my fins sticking up in the air and (4) to go for a long swim (in waders)

.The float tube flip

I started with the float-tubing option. I decided to make this more authentic and bring my rod and hat along for good measure. Flipping float tubes is actually quite hard. I have done so before (also in a swimming pool) just to see if I could get out again, but I have never managed to flip one over unexpectedly. In order to invert yourself, you first have to lift yourself out of the tube and lean forwards until your nose is virtually touching the water. Then with a strong fin flick you can flip over.Once flipped I found it impossible to flip back again. I was hoping to do some eskimo-roll float-tube thing. I was hoping that maybe with practice I could do this while guiding,

'Hey, watch this!'. But it doesn't work. I should point out that it's not particularly easy to get out of the tube; your fins tend to get caught in the seat and/or line tray. But it is quite easy to swim around and (importantly) breathe while this is going on. I could imagine quite happily swimming around with one foot stuck in the float tube pretty much indefinitely. So no worries there, mate.Two points of interest came from the float-tubing misadventure: the first is that my hat sinks like a stone, the second is that my rod quite happily bobbed around the pool on it's own. So when push comes to shove I know which I'll be grabbing hold of next time.

Kudu
12-06-2012, 07:34 AM
Part 2.....




Heavy Water

My next test was heavy water. I figured that all the heavy water would be milling around the deep end pushing all that lighter feebler stuff away, so that's where I went to find it. Jumping in a most dramatic manner off the springboard I went right to the bottom of the pool. Thinking that I had achieved my task, I almost celebrated. But it was not to be; I bobbed right up to the surface again. Try as I might, I just couldn't find water heavy enough to drag me (frantically struggling) to the bottom of the pool. So I had to give up on this one.

Suspender feet

'If I can't sink, then sod it, I'll just have to float... feet first'. So with this in mind I returned to the diving board (first emptying my waders by sticking my feet in the air - 'like a dead duck') whereupon I

dived (full marks for style) head first into the pool. And it worked. Well, sort of. I mean my wader legs did fill up with air, not enough to flip me upside down and suspend me there in an amusing fashion, you understand, but there certainly was air inside those waders.

I could see it. I could feel it - it sort of helped me float around. Now I read some piece somewhere in a magazine a few years back, written by a guy who recommended carrying a sharp knife so as to stab the air out of the waders (presumably he imagined bobbing down river, suspended by his feet - as you do).

Well, I found a much simpler (although admittedly not coloured by the same life-and-death struggle) solution where just by lightly kicking your legs straight the air pops out, and water flows down to take its place.Don't get me wrong her, I'm not suggesting that you should kick the air out - I quite liked having it there, it was quite relaxing in a funny sort of way, but if you should want to get rid of it for some personal reason, then it's quite easy to do. In fact keeping the air there, without getting rid of it is a much trickier proposition. I guess you could put a wader belt on after diving head first into the water. So that's another point; why do those people wear wader belts? 'Cos it looks cool, man'.

Swimming lessons

So, OK those of you who know me, know that I learned to swim last year in Australia. Before that I was as close to a non-swimmer as you could get, without being strictly classified as a non-swimmer. I guess I was about two hundred yards away from being a non-swimmer. And then I decided it would be a good idea to become a tri-athlete. Learning to swim properly had always been something I had thought of as being a good, useful, worthwhile thing. For the triathlon it became a necessity. So I joined a swimming club and got lessons twice a week.You can't learn to swim properly until someone teaches you. Is that like fly casting or what? Bet you didn't see that one coming... a surprise suggestion. Arden psychology.So anyway, the point is that I was now in the position where I could determine whether wearing chest waders was a suitable substitute for swimming trunks.

So I did a few lengths. It was not as I had expected. I had expected to find it hard, lots of resistance, heavy feet, that sort of thing. Not a bit of it; even wearing heavy boots, the buoyancy of the neoprene kept my legs high in the water, actually making swimming very easy. And although the waders I had used for this experiment were not the most streamlined, drag was not the major problem I had imagined. Indeed it was negligible.

Waders for warmth

Now although I am quite confident enough in my swimming ability, to be able to swim all that could be required on any lake distance-wise, often cold would be a problem factor. In early season water, if I was to end up in the middle of a large lake, say, I would hope to hell that I had my waders on. And I would hope that they were neoprene.It would be negligent of me to end this article without mentioning the fact that non-swimmers should get lessons and become swimmers, that poor swimmers should always wear a life-jacket anywhere near water - especially on dams, in boats and possibly in the bath, and lastly float-tubers should wear manual inflatable life-jackets whenever they jump in a tube.

But look, I'm not your mother. I don't feel that it's my duty to tell you these things (even though I just have). It's your personal right to go out there and drown. And if that's what you want, then here's my advice: don't rely on the Killer Wader, it's just another myth. Now spontaneous human combustion - there's another story..

MFERGIE
12-06-2012, 12:06 PM
This thread just went from good solid advice to backyard, kiddy pool myth busters advice!
The Facts:

"The combined weight, bulk and water resistance of filled waders, boots, vest and clothing drastically decreases your mobility. The simple arm and leg movements that would normally help you keep your head above the surface (treading water, for instance) become less effective and more tiring."

Kudu
12-06-2012, 01:02 PM
This thread just went from good solid advice to backyard, kiddy pool myth busters advice!
The Facts:

"The combined weight, bulk and water resistance of filled waders, boots, vest and clothing drastically decreases your mobility. The simple arm and leg movements that would normally help you keep your head above the surface (treading water, for instance) become less effective and more tiring."


What are you failing to say?

1) fall into water wearing waders = death by drowning?
2) fall into water wearing waders = death by failing to swim
3) fall into water wearing waders = death by heavy swamp water
4) fall into water wearing waders = death by neoprene buoyancy failure
5) you have never been in water while wearing neoprene so you really don't know?
6) you support myths and and other fables!

Select 1 - 6 for clarity.

MFERGIE
12-06-2012, 03:13 PM
I failed to say I don't see how a test in a pool or lake has any bearing on wearing waders in and around the delta? The area discussed is known for people going out for the day hunting and being found weeks later dredged up in fishing nets and the sort. It's a very easy place to lose your bearing as the tide comes up and take a different than planned route back. You fall into a good hole over 6 feet and your main concern isn't how well you float but what restricts you from pulling your feet from the mud so that you can get your mouth above water. Fall in the river on the other hand and your biggest problem is drag and current. Waders make you bigger/heavier=more drag and current beating on you as you try to make it to safety. This along with lack of mobility makes getting to the shore or over the side of the boat almost impossible. I fell overboard trying grab a downed bird once. Although I had neoprenes on with a safety belt, it was almost impossible to get back into the boat and yes I had a helping hand thankfully! Had I been alone I would be posting this from the pearly gates. I will gladly take you out in the Delta marsh in my 12' and you can put this "theory" to test...of course I'll bring my hd video camera along so as to not leave the forum followers to wonder what your fate was. Wellington point park Ladner, you name the time ;)

Kudu
12-06-2012, 04:29 PM
I failed to say I don't see how a test in a pool or lake has any bearing on wearing waders in and around the delta? The area discussed is known for people going out for the day hunting and being found weeks later dredged up in fishing nets and the sort. It's a very easy place to lose your bearing as the tide comes up and take a different than planned route back. You fall into a good hole over 6 feet and your main concern isn't how well you float but what restricts you from pulling your feet from the mud so that you can get your mouth above water. Fall in the river on the other hand and your biggest problem is drag and current. Waders make you bigger/heavier=more drag and current beating on you as you try to make it to safety. This along with lack of mobility makes getting to the shore or over the side of the boat almost impossible. I fell overboard trying grab a downed bird once. Although I had neoprenes on with a safety belt, it was almost impossible to get back into the boat and yes I had a helping hand thankfully! Had I been alone I would be posting this from the pearly gates. I will gladly take you out in the Delta marsh in my 12' and you can put this "theory" to test...of course I'll bring my hd video camera along so as to not leave the forum followers to wonder what your fate was. Wellington point park Ladner, you name the time ;)



Sounds like a plan - lets do it!

I'll bring my 12' along, so between the two - I may end up suspended like a turd on the video, or you may just end up buying the beers!

Sako 75
12-06-2012, 04:33 PM
Yes, be careful out there when it low tide. Those ditch are deceiving looking. Being there and never again.

MFERGIE
12-06-2012, 04:38 PM
Kudu your one funny sob! Your suspended like a turd comment will have me chuckling all day!

J-Man
12-06-2012, 04:39 PM
Also if your a walker you have to account for a heavy when wet jacket (walmart special, fine in rain but fall in "oh fak") and a day pack full of decoys and some batteries for the robos. Then that gumbo thick mud is always fun. Best advice, don't hunt alone and be careful. I wear the neoprene waders and surprised by a ditch twice, both times I got out wet but without extra help. But it only takes one time and some bad luck for that to be your last trip out.

therise
12-14-2016, 04:15 PM
Has anyone been out lately? With all the recent snow and cold weather?