Ericdc wrote:Not detached from the regular duck season.
Made me look. Geese have been starting a week ahead of ducks for some years now and still do.
Moderator: Darren
Ericdc wrote:Not detached from the regular duck season.
The Beaver Moon is November's full moon, named because beavers would prepare their winter lodges and dams during this time. The 2025 Beaver Moon is a supermoon, meaning it will be the closest and brightest full moon of the year. It peaks on Wednesday, November 5, 2025.

Ducaholic wrote:We may top a million birds...
Hope the weather continues on its current trend

David wants it sunny and 60 degrees every day with a gentle southeast wind.DComeaux wrote:I refuse to take part in these migration shenanigans' concerning weather. Fool me once, shame on you; Fool me twice, shame on me. It's an emotional roller-coaster that I've exited.
Darren wrote:Ducaholic wrote:We may top a million birds...
Hope the weather continues on its current trend
510,000 ducks statewide in the Nov 2024 survey, lowest on record, so lets see where it shakes out when this November's report drops late next week. 584,000 in Nov 2023.
The Beaver Moon will deliver, book it![]()

Ericdc wrote:That'll move some birds for sure, wimpy ducks as Dr. Mike calls them.
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Ericdc wrote:They always do. They go there first every year, early water.
I'm going to try to get my farmer to put boards in October 1st next year and start pumping later in October.
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I looked at those numbers yesterday as well and was surprised by how low they were. My usual Missouri barometer, squaw creek, isn’t doing counts until the politicians stop squabbling, so no way to get a feel for how it looks historically there. Bell rose flight was weathered out this week around St. Louis.Ducaholic wrote:Not many ducks in the heartland as of earlier this week. https://mdc12.mdc.mo.gov/Applications/P ... report=400

Coworker of mine is leaving tonight headed up. Said friends of his have struggled up there this week as well. Read the corn was late coming off due to rain so I wonder if that caused some to overfly the Dakotas.Ericdc wrote:Coworker had been in north central North Dakota all week and I don't think they killed 20 ducks. Said they just aren't there right now.
Cousins are having a good week in Kansas though.
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Ericdc wrote:Coworker had been in north central North Dakota all week and I don't think they killed 20 ducks. Said they just aren't there right now.
Cousins are having a good week in Kansas though.
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Duck Engr wrote:Coworker of mine is leaving tonight headed up. Said friends of his have struggled up there this week as well. Read the corn was late coming off due to rain so I wonder if that caused some to overfly the Dakotas.Ericdc wrote:Coworker had been in north central North Dakota all week and I don't think they killed 20 ducks. Said they just aren't there right now.
Cousins are having a good week in Kansas though.
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Certainly plausible and hopefully the case!Darren wrote:Duck Engr wrote:Coworker of mine is leaving tonight headed up. Said friends of his have struggled up there this week as well. Read the corn was late coming off due to rain so I wonder if that caused some to overfly the Dakotas.Ericdc wrote:Coworker had been in north central North Dakota all week and I don't think they killed 20 ducks. Said they just aren't there right now.
Cousins are having a good week in Kansas though.
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Could be that the birds have just left there, and not so much that they aren't there yet. Points southward have lots of birds so hard to call S Dakota's struggles a sign of whats to come or not.

Rick wrote:The "hunters" not out doing their own preseason prep are missing out on one of the best parts. Have your mongolier ever taken where you've used them?

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