Taking advantage of the weather

jflewis88

Member
Question for everyone… I haven't yet gotten into waterfowl, but I know that the timing of a front can have a major effect on how ducks/geese behave.

What do you all think - same for upland birds? Assuming you have the flexibility to choose, best to get after roosters ahead or behind a major front?
 
Question for everyone… I haven't yet gotten into waterfowl, but I know that the timing of a front can have a major effect on how ducks/geese behave.

What do you all think - same for upland birds? Assuming you have the flexibility to choose, best to get after roosters ahead or behind a major front?

Depends on what you have access to (feed, cover). If you like hunting the feed, get out the day before the front. IME they tend to spend extra time in the field the day before a nasty front. The day of a nasty one I find them in the heavy cover. If it snows all day for example, I hunt the cover that day. At first light the following day, they're right back at the feed, then they'll get a more "normal" pattern (eat, loaf, eat, roost....ish).
 
I think that the only weather that I would really avoid is when it is hot.
Dogs have a very hard time in the heat finding birds, they are running like crazy.
 
Upland birds seem to move before and during the teeth of the storm trying to lard up in case it stays bad for a time. Pheasants in particular will stuff themselves prior to and in the early stages of a storm. Research has shown some pheasants may go days, even a week, holed up in thick cover, not even venturing out to feed during a prolonged blow, subsisting on whatever is available in easy reach and body fat. Waterfowl are a different issue, ducks and geese fear only ice and fog. All other events are just another day on the water. if it's icing any birds moving are getting out of Dodge or coming from somewhere worse looking for open water and company. Fog makes them look for friendly surroundings, fly lower, both types of conditions are among the easiest to decoy birds. Waterfowlers love nasty weather. I'm sure you know that ice is the pheasant killer, They need to face the storm to allow their feathers to shed ice, but are compromised by the fact that ice developes around their nose holes and freezes making breathing impossible. Quail the same. Quail flushed in sub arctic conditions sometimes die of sudden body heat loss, and fall dead without a shot. If you witness that, it;s time to go home, or hunt ducks or geese.
 
Thanks

Thanks for the insight, guys. All matches up with what I was thinking, boiled down it's all pretty much common sense:

Don't have the dog running after 'em when it's too hot for the pup
Look for birds in heavy cover in crappy conditions
If the weather alone is lethal to them, don't go flushing them!

Pretty basic truths, it appears there aren't too many mysteries to hunting roosters - except where they're hiding at any given time on any given day in any given cover :D
 
There is simply nothing better than hunting roosters in the snow. Even the wiliest of cocks will hold tighter in the snow! They also tend to group up offering great chances of witnessing huge flushes. Plus, you have the added advantage of tracking them and learning even more about their escape tactics. If it's a REALLY miserable and prolonged storm, I don't mind leaving them alone.
 
28 deg. NNW winds at 22 mph and blowing snow. Stomped my arse off and only saw three sharptails, and a big Whitetail buck who survived the yearly onslaught. First time in recent memory that we got skunked. Never even saw a pheasant.Never saw a dog get scent. Of course it's 4:00 PM straight-up, could probably limit on the road out back. It's still SD afterall.
 
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