Rick wrote:Do have to wonder why the resident population has been so slow to spread in LA.
Rick wrote:Do have to wonder why the resident population has been so slow to spread in LA.
SpinnerMan wrote:Rick wrote:Do have to wonder why the resident population has been so slow to spread in LA.
Ducaholic wrote:Rick wrote:Do have to wonder why the resident population has been so slow to spread in LA.
Check the golf courses and hi falooting subdivisions. They spreading just fine. I think we may have an early season soon. Not sure what that means for us country folks but some might get whacked in suburbia.
Rick wrote:Ducaholic wrote:Rick wrote:Do have to wonder why the resident population has been so slow to spread in LA.
Check the golf courses and hi falooting subdivisions. They spreading just fine. I think we may have an early season soon. Not sure what that means for us country folks but some might get whacked in suburbia.
Resident Canadas were here when I got here in '83, and their spread hasn't begun to mirror what I saw of the introduction and spread of Mid Ohio Valley residents in the less than decade prior. Case in point being the birds above which are presumably from the Lake Arthur flock that was here when I got here and are the first I recall witnessing on ag land or water. (Hence the photo.)
Ducaholic wrote:I think the short stopping of Canda's by the gov't in a concerted effort had a lot to do with their proliferation and what you observed and described. The timing is certainly in line. I think wild geese became domesticated in some sense in a lot of areas in the mid-west when their migration to the deep south became non-existent
Rick wrote:Ducaholic wrote:I think the short stopping of Canda's by the gov't in a concerted effort had a lot to do with their proliferation and what you observed and described. The timing is certainly in line. I think wild geese became domesticated in some sense in a lot of areas in the mid-west when their migration to the deep south became non-existent
They were gone from LA decades before I started seeing big Canadas in SE Ohio, and never mind how many of which sported local bands. Not even sure the LA Canadas I've seen in photos were the same 10-12 pound "giants" we had in SE Ohio, may have been Mid Continent birds that just looked huge in comparison to the ducks with them...
No notion of what's happening in Mandeville or elsewhere to foster talk of resident seasons, just know the Rockefeller Refuge flock, Jerry Jone's Cameron Parish birds and Bubba's in Lake Arthur have sure seemed stagnant, despite of decades of Canada hunting closure in their areas.
DComeaux wrote:Those young boys on the Chenier ridge give em hell.
Rick wrote:SpinnerMan wrote:Rick wrote:Do have to wonder why the resident population has been so slow to spread in LA.
That little shit couldn't eat a broken egg. But his grandparents haven't kept our summer ducks from doing much better.
Rick wrote:DComeaux wrote:Those young boys on the Chenier ridge give em hell.
Saw it done at Pecan Island my first year here. Same geniuses were hard on white pelicans. But if someone's been shooting Lake Arthur's geese they've been mighty sly about it. The lone exception I'm aware of being a drunk with a .22 pistol in the park - next to the cop shop.
Darren wrote: presumably toward nearest neighborhood pond to feast on potato chips and bread.
DComeaux wrote:Darren wrote: presumably toward nearest neighborhood pond to feast on potato chips and bread.
I liken hunting these "resident flocks" to high fence hunting. It's not something that in the least bit interests me.
Darren wrote:DComeaux wrote:Darren wrote: presumably toward nearest neighborhood pond to feast on potato chips and bread.
I liken hunting these "resident flocks" to high fence hunting. It's not something that in the least bit interests me.
Probably a fair comparison. YouTube has some golf course hunts, can't imagine that's all too difficult. Can confirm they are pretty destructive on golf courses and make a huge mess as they do anywhere
Rick wrote:Well, they sharpen up under fire, but they're still Canadas. Or, at least, that was the case during my time with them.
Darren wrote:YouTube has some golf course hunts, can't imagine that's all too difficult.
SpinnerMan wrote:Rick wrote:Well, they sharpen up under fire, but they're still Canadas. Or, at least, that was the case during my time with them.
Were many people hunting them at that point. My experience is that the pressure has gone up dramatically. When I first started hunting in the 80's, we pretty much had the entire river to ourselves. We didn't have any clue what we were doing. The number of hunters grew a lot over time because there were geese all over the place. That has actually reversed because there really isn't anywhere the geese can get away from the hunters.
Johnc wrote:That blind spread looked horrible
Rick wrote:Oh! And, Dave, Dave, our beloved Dave, I'd forgotten to note that the genius also burned up the pump, itself, and left the engine's exhaust uncovered and let the rain rust the rings tight. We miss you, Dave!
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