Report for December 6th, 2024, SC MN, public land hunt.
We arrived at our first spot at around 9:30. It is a WMA, with a wide creek running through it, separating the two halves. A harvested corn field ran along the north edge, with us parked at the NW corner. Wind was out of the west, but single digits. 20 deg temp to start, but quickly went up into the 30s and even hit 41 when we got to the 2nd location close to 3.
I picked this spot, that I have hunted before sunset in some past years, because it has a larger slough on it that isn't accessible until the water freezes. And more importantly, the corn field edge along the south side, in the SE corner has no access, other than private land, unless you can cross that slough.
We made our way down the north side, a mix of trees and brush, without a lot of activity. I did see 2 doves that were enjoying their season being over. There is a lot of beaver activity, and down from one of their dams, it was open, running water for quite a ways, out the east side of the property. So we backtracked and crossed the creek on another dam that looked more stable, upstream.
Aside from a wild flush from a hen, I don't think we saw anything else on the way over to the slough. The slough has, in many parts, cattails that are chest height or lower, and there are areas with blow downs and is mostly navigable. We made our way along the east edge of the property line, that crosses the slough. We could have ventured further east, due to water laws, but we didn't on this trip. I was a little cautious with the ice, and wanted to get over to the other side in a more direct route.
As we approached the SE corner of the property a bird got up wild. It may have been a rooster, but I couldn't tell for sure. We hit the other side and started working along the solid ground between the corn field and the slough, moving west. As we approached a tree, ahead and to my left, with wide, low branches, a rooster got up between it and the edge of the field, heading west. The tree was between me and the bird, with the bird at about 20 yards. I took one shot through the branches before the bird passed behind the trunk. I thought I saw him dip down a bit at the shot, but he kept going. By the time he cleared the branches on the other side of the tree, and I could see him again, he was a ways out there. One more shot, but he kept moving. I followed his progress as he sailed along the edge of the slough, and finally lost sight of him up by a patch of reed grass, about 600 yards ahead of us.
We continued on, hiking west, into the light breeze, and Honey went on point 100 to 200 yards ahead on the edge of the slough, looking to her right (north), at a higher cluster of cattails, surrounded by blow down on the slough side and some brush on the land side. When I got within about 15-20 yards of the patch, the bird must have started flushing, as honey launched into the cluster. The bird had a hard time getting out the NW side of the patch, and I hit him hard in the back before he could pick up speed. Honey was on him, but disappointed that he remained motionless. A nice sized 2nd or 3rd year bird. A good harvest to break the skunk streak of my previous 2 outings.
We kept working the south edge, until we got to where the slough bulges to the south, so we were then walking on hard water instead of the edge. About 150 yards from the reed grass patch I had marked as a possibility for the first rooster's landing area, a rooster cackled loudly up by that patch, and 2 other roosters called back from the north side of the long, wide thicket that runs along the north side of the slough.
Just shy of the reed grass, Honey went on point. It took me a minute to find her ahead of me, as the criss crossing belly height cattails obscured my view of the ice. I got directly behind her and saw she was looking to the right. The rooster got up and provided me a very gettable shot, as it veered to the right. I tickled him 2 times out of *4* shots (I can't remember taking 4 shots on a bird), but he went on his merry way, up and over the thicket ridge on the other side of the slough, some 600+ yards away.
We pressed on through the edge of the reed grass and Honey went on point at the edge of some blow down, where it meets up with the standing tails. As I approached her from behind, she moved forward, and I heard what I thought was a couple flaps, but no flush. I went up there expecting her to have a hen, but when I looked down, I saw a rooster tail to one side of her head, conforming she had a boy pinned against the ice. I reached down and pulled him up by the butt. A drop of blood came out of his beak, and he gave up the ghost several seconds later. That's unusual, because I haven't known Honey to chomp on birds. I still need to clean him today, but I am giving him a greater than 50% chance of being the first bird I shot at behind the tree.
On the NW side of the slough is another tilled corn field. Staying on the hard water, we made our way past the public land boundary, and then started working that edge back to the north. I should mention we would come across hens here and there, with a mix of holding relatively tight and wild flushes.
At one point, I got out my phone so I would know when we could venture back on solid ground if needed. Just then, Honey came from the upwind side of a rooster in the cattails near the edge, and he flushed. He banked to my right, but was over the solid ground, so I couldn't take a shot. It would have been awkward anyway, with my phone in my left hand. I watched him sail back over the thicket, near where the previous, 4 shot bird, had gone.
We got back to public land and worked the thicket and edge of the cattails down the north side of the slough 400 yards or so until we could get around to the other side of the thicket. On the other side is an open area maybe 300 yards across, and 400 yards long, in a U shape, with thickets forming the boundary and the creek on the other side of the thickets to our right. There is some frozen water here and there in this area, but mostly wetland grasses. I did spy a smaller chunk of cattails up ahead, to the left, next to the thicket, and thought it could be promising.
I think a hen or two got up as we worked forward and back and forth across the area. We finally got up to the small patch of cattails. Honey was to the south of them, with not much of a westerly breeze in this sheltered area. Still, she was getting some ground scent as she worked toward the cattails. I positioned myself east of the clump. As she got into the edges, she was sniffing the air a bit, and then launched -- a sure sign birds were starting to flush or run. As the birds rose, I heard at least 2 of the 3 roosters cackle. I drew down on the closest one of the 3 easily gettable birds, knowing my Minnesota December limit would be filled. But... No bang! No click! Frantically, I got my finger back on the safety to push it the rest of the way off. But when I focused back on the cacklers, they were out of range. Two flew over the thicket, back to the slough, presumably, and one flew ahead along the thicket. All I could do was laugh.
We did meet up with one more rooster ahead, where a thicket meets with an oxbow offshoot of the main creek. He, of course, flushed behind some of the thicket branches and into the sun, and my 2 shots didn't connect.
By the time we got back to the vehicle, our numbers stood at 16 hens/unknowns, and 9 roosters, including the 2 in the bag. We would have to hunt another spot if we wanted a chance at that 3rd bird, but felt good at having 2 locked in.
We went back to the place we had hunted in the mini-hurricane/blizzard last outing. We had found a cluster of roosters in the SW corner edge of the large slough there. But when we arrived, we saw a white pickup at the parking area. A brief discussion revealed he was just leaving and had walked the perimeter counter clockwise. I wasn't sure if that meant the cattails or outside the thicket that runs along the south edge of the round slough. We decided it was a big enough place that we'd still try our luck. 41 degrees at the start and about 33 degrees when we got back to the suv.
We ended up circling the slough in a clockwise fashion, and only met up with 9 hens. The warm weather probably had the roosters in private land, without cattails, but without hunters too.
A safety flub away from a 3 bird limit, we ended the day, thankful for the opportunity to be out in nature and adding to our shared experiences bank of memories.