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Unread 02-08-2012, 08:43 PM   #21
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charlie cleveland
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enjoyed the hunt very much...i too getting a little slow on the draw...and outa breath after a hundred yards.... charlie
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Unread 02-08-2012, 08:58 PM   #22
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Originally Posted by Destry L. Hoffard View Post
A lot of quail and grouse shooting is quick snap shooting at close range. There's some of that in waterfowling when you shoot them feet down over the decoys. But on the days when they aren't doing that it gets a lot different. That's when the quail and grouse hunters have a tougher time. If you're a dove hunter then you'd probably be fine on ducks, the shooting is similar a lot of the time.

Both types of shooting take skill, neither is easy, and all have their charms. I probably couldn't hit a grouse flushing in heavy cover to save my life. But I can hit a goose swinging over at 40 yards in a high wind.

There's a great MacQuarrie story about the confident duck hunter going prairie chicken shooting and the tough time he has. If you look at it from the other way, it's the same kinda deal.

Bundle a grouse hunter up in a heavy coat and gloves, park him in a metal boat in the cold blowing wind to stiffen up a bit. Then hand him a long heavy gun that handles like a railroad iron to shoot, and tell him to kill a redhead ripping by about 60 miles an hour out at 40 yards on the edge of the decoys while the boat rocks back and forth.

Take a chubby cigar smoking duck hunter, walk him up and down the hills half the day. Give him some little toy size shotgun to shoot that feels like he's throwing around a broom handle. About the time he's panting and out of breath, the sweat starts rolling into his eyes, and he's got a saw briar stuck to the crotch of his pants, let a grouse get up from a thicket and give him a split second to shoot at it before it flys behind a tree.

I think you can read both sides of this coin.


Destry
I will defer to the fact that obviousely you have more experience then myself at actual waterfowl .

However I also feel it needs to be proven to me that I can't hit the things !

To many years of skeet , trap , sporting clays , dove etc etc etc have me still believing I can do it well enough to get a limit in a good many situations . Mallards coming down in the timber holes they were hunting while I was there are chip shots no getting around it !

I truely wish I had gone and gotten waders and a license while I was there !
Incidently my present preferred dove gun weighs about 8 or 9 pounds . And since I had my preferred dove gun with me
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Unread 02-09-2012, 08:29 PM   #23
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chris dawe
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Destry L. Hoffard View Post
A lot of quail and grouse shooting is quick snap shooting at close range. There's some of that in waterfowling when you shoot them feet down over the decoys. But on the days when they aren't doing that it gets a lot different. That's when the quail and grouse hunters have a tougher time. If you're a dove hunter then you'd probably be fine on ducks, the shooting is similar a lot of the time.

Both types of shooting take skill, neither is easy, and all have their charms. I probably couldn't hit a grouse flushing in heavy cover to save my life. But I can hit a goose swinging over at 40 yards in a high wind.

There's a great MacQuarrie story about the confident duck hunter going prairie chicken shooting and the tough time he has. If you look at it from the other way, it's the same kinda deal.

Bundle a grouse hunter up in a heavy coat and gloves, park him in a metal boat in the cold blowing wind to stiffen up a bit. Then hand him a long heavy gun that handles like a railroad iron to shoot, and tell him to kill a redhead ripping by about 60 miles an hour out at 40 yards on the edge of the decoys while the boat rocks back and forth.

Take a chubby cigar smoking duck hunter, walk him up and down the hills half the day. Give him some little toy size shotgun to shoot that feels like he's throwing around a broom handle. About the time he's panting and out of breath, the sweat starts rolling into his eyes, and he's got a saw briar stuck to the crotch of his pants, let a grouse get up from a thicket and give him a split second to shoot at it before it flys behind a tree.

I think you can read both sides of this coin.


Destry
More true word's could not have been spoken,my duck hunting friend think's my grouse hunting shot's are astounding...but when he take's me duck shooting,well sir ...it's down right pathetic.

He tell's me I think too much with the duck's ,watching them come in for what seem's like forever...then trying to take what "I " think is an easy shot.
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