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Unread 12-06-2018, 02:01 PM   #11
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James L. Martin
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I was thinking the same, I have hunted Maine in the last week of October and didn't find many Woodcock then, Nov 15 seems very late.
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Unread 12-06-2018, 02:01 PM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kurt Sauers View Post
I just love woodcock. What's the Scottish double?
It's a provincial maker out of Elgin, Francis Davie. Most likely a Birmingham gun done up in Scottish fashion. Light 6lbs 5 oz. Our family name is out of Scotland, so it's a real treat to find one I can shoot and not worry too much about.
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Unread 12-06-2018, 02:15 PM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Gary Laudermilch View Post
Do you consider good woodcock numbers on Nov. 15 in Maine normal? Seems like most of the birds would have moved south by that time.
We're on the eastern most point along the coast, so our weather is a lot different than inland, but things have definitely been very different the past two years. Last year in October we were still in the upper 70's and the push( 15 to 20 bird days) happened after the 15th, we were running grouse and kicking up woodcock, in the past 20 yrs hunting Downeast that's the first time I had ever experienced that. With all things considered normally in the lower wetter thickets we can have a few birds that will hang around into Dec, but never in big numbers, there might be one or two stragglers. Over the past years there has definitely been a shift not only with climate but migration patterns as well. On a typical year the first week of November is when you start seeing the bird numbers dry up.
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Unread 12-06-2018, 03:36 PM   #14
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Rick Riddell View Post
Over the past years there has definitely been a shift not only with climate but migration patterns as well. On a typical year the first week of November is when you start seeing the bird numbers dry up.
About the same in Vermont's NEK.





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Unread 12-06-2018, 04:15 PM   #15
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Its one game bird I love to hunt, I try to find patterns, when you think you got it down, those little buggers will school you every time!
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Unread 12-06-2018, 04:33 PM   #16
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The past 2 years i thought i missed them, it has been very thin in the 3rd and 4th week of Oct. This year 1st week of Nov. was best with no time to hunt later. Rick you are right about trying to figure them out. I am hunting western mountain areas.
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Unread 12-06-2018, 05:56 PM   #17
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But this year the first big flight (17 productive points in 1 hr., 15 mins.) came in on the Friday of the third weekend of October and was sporadically good from then through the first full week of November. Then we got a lot of snow squalls and temps in the low twenties/high teens at night. That ended it.






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Unread 12-08-2018, 10:46 AM   #18
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Here is a pretty cool link studying the migration routes along the East Coast, Moosehorn is about 30 minutes from the house. https://www.woodcockmigration.org
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