A5 Sweet 16
Well-known member
I take stealth while pheasant hunting very seriously. It's THE reason I try to hunt into the wind as much as possible - to mask any sound my dog & I make. (I feel like he scents birds almost equally well upwind or downwind.) Getting 5-10 yards closer to a rooster before he becomes aware of us can make the difference between a decent shot & no shot at all.
This past weekend, I was at a lake on a windy day (about 20 mph). A jet ski drove by straight upwind of me. I have teenage daughters, so although I could barely see the riders (could hardly see the jet ski itself), I can tell you there were definitely teenage girls on this jet ski. Granted, sound travels over water a little better than over grass & cattails, but I could here them yelling with glee, as though they were almost right in front of me. Google Earth showed they were right around 2,000 feet away!!
Of course what came to my mind was THAT's why I try to be quiet while I'm hunting & why I hunt upwind. Roosters have much better ears than I do. Here's a picture of Ace one day last season when we took advantage of a stiff, favorable wind. FWIW, neither of my teenage daughters was along that day.
This past weekend, I was at a lake on a windy day (about 20 mph). A jet ski drove by straight upwind of me. I have teenage daughters, so although I could barely see the riders (could hardly see the jet ski itself), I can tell you there were definitely teenage girls on this jet ski. Granted, sound travels over water a little better than over grass & cattails, but I could here them yelling with glee, as though they were almost right in front of me. Google Earth showed they were right around 2,000 feet away!!
Of course what came to my mind was THAT's why I try to be quiet while I'm hunting & why I hunt upwind. Roosters have much better ears than I do. Here's a picture of Ace one day last season when we took advantage of a stiff, favorable wind. FWIW, neither of my teenage daughters was along that day.