Bob Peters
Well-known member
I know a lot of guys like when things freeze because they can hunt the cattails. Of course some you can hunt earlier because they're fairly dry. I've read some guys get on a frozen lake and walk the cattail edge. I've done a little of this, and got one bird doing it. What do you look for in cattails? It seems like in MN many of the cattails are very tall and thick, vs. South Dakota they seem a little shorter and thinner and nicer to walk through. Of course there are exceptions to the rule, I remember a WIA the first time ever I went to hunt for the King of birds, the ringneck rooster pheasant, in South Dakota. Not far from a well known town, this spot was crawling with birds. Walking in, flying in, pecking around out in the field and on the fenceline. A shelterbelt on one side, a weedy fence line and a whole field of corn that was chopped but still full of stubble and corn cobbs. And in the heart of it a large cattail patch that was thick and gnarly and warm in January...but I digress.
I've kinda learned to pick my battles with hunting cattails in sloughs, lakes, creeks, pits and ponds. Of course the "goldilocks" cattails, thick enough to hold a good bird population, short enough to see/shoot over, full of deer trails, I'll walk those all day. A couple private spots I hunt late season are thick and gnarly. When I first started I'd plow through them, often flushing birds I could barely see, huffing, puffing, and mostly muffing shots. It really wears the dog out too when you try to hunt the really thick stuff for a long period of time. Now what I try to do is, pick an inside edge, outside edge, and walk some trails if there are some. Sometimes if there's a cane break, aka phragmites patch, or a willow clump, that is of reasonable size I'll bust through the thick stuff and see if I can get a flush before retreating to the more manageable edge. One other thing I observed and believe mentioned before. I once hunted a spot down by Fairmont VERY late season, probably last weekend. Snow drifts were deep. I felt crazy as a loon walking out there. When I hit the cattails there was no snow in them, they were loaded with birds, and they were perfect for hunting. Up to my armpits, trails in them etc. I went back the next year and they were all 6-7 feet tall and thick! Not sure what happened there. I never take secret spots by pm, but if you want to send a secret technique, hey, I'm all good with that!
I've kinda learned to pick my battles with hunting cattails in sloughs, lakes, creeks, pits and ponds. Of course the "goldilocks" cattails, thick enough to hold a good bird population, short enough to see/shoot over, full of deer trails, I'll walk those all day. A couple private spots I hunt late season are thick and gnarly. When I first started I'd plow through them, often flushing birds I could barely see, huffing, puffing, and mostly muffing shots. It really wears the dog out too when you try to hunt the really thick stuff for a long period of time. Now what I try to do is, pick an inside edge, outside edge, and walk some trails if there are some. Sometimes if there's a cane break, aka phragmites patch, or a willow clump, that is of reasonable size I'll bust through the thick stuff and see if I can get a flush before retreating to the more manageable edge. One other thing I observed and believe mentioned before. I once hunted a spot down by Fairmont VERY late season, probably last weekend. Snow drifts were deep. I felt crazy as a loon walking out there. When I hit the cattails there was no snow in them, they were loaded with birds, and they were perfect for hunting. Up to my armpits, trails in them etc. I went back the next year and they were all 6-7 feet tall and thick! Not sure what happened there. I never take secret spots by pm, but if you want to send a secret technique, hey, I'm all good with that!