assateague wrote:Sometimes the quickest way to put out a fire is with an explosion.
These big birds are stay-at-homes when nesting, but the non-breeding portion of the flock – older geese and young, unmated birds – may migrate, usually in mid-May, in what is termed a molt migration. Some will go all the way to the Canadian breeding grounds, while others spend the summer in northern Wisconsin and southern Canada.
By mid-September, however, the bulk of these vacationers have returned to their familiar haunts in northern Illinois. The population of resident giant Canada geese in northern Illinois is difficult to assess due to the large urban area they inhabit, but estimates of several hundred thousand are thought to be reasonable.
SpinnerMan wrote:I wish we had an early wood duck season. That would be awesome. I see tons of wood ducks in early goose. The best/worst was the time I had at least 2 dozen on the water that I could see, probably another dozen or more in the water behind me, and more on the other side of the islands in front of me. They came in small group after small group. It was pretty awesome.
Steele22 wrote:SpinnerMan wrote:I wish we had an early wood duck season. That would be awesome. I see tons of wood ducks in early goose. The best/worst was the time I had at least 2 dozen on the water that I could see, probably another dozen or more in the water behind me, and more on the other side of the islands in front of me. They came in small group after small group. It was pretty awesome.
Fun to watch at least just hell of a lot more fun to kill
Steele22 wrote:Yea, that would help you all. It's been an awful cool summer compared to the last 2 years. Maybe that will help some getting them moving. The residents sure get smart fast
assateague wrote:Steele22 wrote:Yea, that would help you all. It's been an awful cool summer compared to the last 2 years. Maybe that will help some getting them moving. The residents sure get smart fast
It hardly feels like we've had a summer. It's usually 90s in the day, mid 70s at night, and humid as hell. Two mornings ago it was 58. In August. What the hell. I'm sitting out in a field right now trying to burn up some crop damage deer tags in a t-shirt and pants, and I'm getting cold since the sun dropped. Nonsense. And there are Canadas flying over by the bucketful.
SpinnerMan wrote:Our early goose is weird.
http://www.gameandfishmag.com/hunting/hunting_ducks-geese-hunting_il_aa101603a/These big birds are stay-at-homes when nesting, but the non-breeding portion of the flock – older geese and young, unmated birds – may migrate, usually in mid-May, in what is termed a molt migration. Some will go all the way to the Canadian breeding grounds, while others spend the summer in northern Wisconsin and southern Canada.
By mid-September, however, the bulk of these vacationers have returned to their familiar haunts in northern Illinois. The population of resident giant Canada geese in northern Illinois is difficult to assess due to the large urban area they inhabit, but estimates of several hundred thousand are thought to be reasonable.
It also seems when the young fledge, they often move out of the area. Also a lot that don't seem to be feeding on grass a short walk from their roost.
Some years hunting is good and other years you can go days on end without even seeing a single goose.
I haven't seen a single goose in the air in months. However, I saw hundreds of geese on the ground over the last week.
Sometime in the next month, it's like a switch flips and I'll see geese all the time. The only question is whether it will happen before or after 9/15. Usually before, sometimes even before the 1st. Before that it is just dumb luck if you catch a random goose, after that, they seem to be everywhere.
Duckdog wrote:That looks sweet! Did you say you were in Illinois?
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