This evening, I was able to flush 2 roosters and drop them both. But unfortunately lost one in the thick cattails. I think the bird may have ran off and the pup couldn’t catch up to it. Anywho, I came back to the truck at 330 as another hunter pulled into the parking lot. I told him I was done with two shot and 1 recovery. This is where we got into an interesting conversation. He told me I should still be able to keep hunting since I only recovered 1 bird. I told him a situation I had over a decade ago waterfowl hunting.
I was with a group of 6 guys that day and we happen to hit a nice migration of ducks. A buddy hit two ducks that sailed a few hundred yards into thick cattails. We all watch the ducks drop but knew the recovery was next to impossible. The guys decided to keep on hunting until he gets his 2 birds. As we were packing up, a boat approached us and we knew right away they were COs. They came and checked our limits. We had the exact limit for 6 guys. This was when one of the COs brought up the two birds that sailed several hundred yards into the cattails. He asked who was the shooter(s) and my buddy answered. He was issued a two bird over limit citation but the CO was nice enough to not take his “gun” from him. . Granted we were all LEOs. Honest truth was we felt like the COs could have handle it better but it is what it is. My buddy tried to contest it at court and loss.
We later ask another CO who worked in our area and he agrees with what the CO did. He said if you as a hunter knew you hit your target and more than likely the animal/bird is going to be dead, err on the safe side and count it towards your limit whether you recover it or not because if a CO witness it, it’s on their discretion. And more than likely the court will be on their side. I asked him what about a deer? Bear? And his answer was it depends!
So this brings me back to my chat with the hunter today. He said BS, if the CO brings him his dead bird than he will own up to it otherwise he keeps shooting away.
So do you guys keep shooting away or do you count loss bird towards your daily limit?
I was with a group of 6 guys that day and we happen to hit a nice migration of ducks. A buddy hit two ducks that sailed a few hundred yards into thick cattails. We all watch the ducks drop but knew the recovery was next to impossible. The guys decided to keep on hunting until he gets his 2 birds. As we were packing up, a boat approached us and we knew right away they were COs. They came and checked our limits. We had the exact limit for 6 guys. This was when one of the COs brought up the two birds that sailed several hundred yards into the cattails. He asked who was the shooter(s) and my buddy answered. He was issued a two bird over limit citation but the CO was nice enough to not take his “gun” from him. . Granted we were all LEOs. Honest truth was we felt like the COs could have handle it better but it is what it is. My buddy tried to contest it at court and loss.
We later ask another CO who worked in our area and he agrees with what the CO did. He said if you as a hunter knew you hit your target and more than likely the animal/bird is going to be dead, err on the safe side and count it towards your limit whether you recover it or not because if a CO witness it, it’s on their discretion. And more than likely the court will be on their side. I asked him what about a deer? Bear? And his answer was it depends!
So this brings me back to my chat with the hunter today. He said BS, if the CO brings him his dead bird than he will own up to it otherwise he keeps shooting away.
So do you guys keep shooting away or do you count loss bird towards your daily limit?