Very similar situation in North Central.Between rain, high winds, and the standing corn & sun seeds, it's been tough going in SW ND this last weekend & current week. Between last Friday and Sunday, the Wrecking Crew and I walked approximately 15 miles of cover to flush 3 roosters and a handful of hens (got 2 of those roosters)...
Moist air and plants hold scent better too, so harder for those gremlins to evade our 4 legged friends.Hunt cattails that arent in standing water and cedar trees when its raining. Wet birds must smell stronger then dry birds bc it seems that I always have great luck during or directly after a rain.
That’s a good idea checking the canary grass. I shot three quick roosters in that stuff last year in a light rain. They were more in the thinner stuff where the smart weed and sunflower had grown up through it.The thick bladed wetland grasses (not sure what they are called) are so thick this year that I wonder if the birds can stay out of the rain by merely tucking into that? Of course, if you don't have that on the property you are hunting, then weedy thickets are still the ticket.
I've found them in some sparse wild sunflowers this year too.That’s a good idea checking the canary grass. I shot three quick roosters in that stuff last year in a light rain. They were more in the thinner stuff where the smart weed and sunflower had grown up through it.
View attachment 11815
Hey, that dog is not brown!!That’s a good idea checking the canary grass. I shot three quick roosters in that stuff last year in a light rain. They were more in the thinner stuff where the smart weed and sunflower had grown up through it.
View attachment 11815
Tell us more about this? Do you hide in the weeds and wait?Hunker down in the rain and wait for birds to walk by.