nathanpezold
FNG
- Joined
- Nov 15, 2021
- Messages
- 37
I am looking to get into waterfowl hunting and am looking to get my first call. Any help would be appreciated.
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I like the Quack Head calls. Cheap and easy. You can call ducks in with cheap calls you have to know how to make the sounds is all. Practice Practice Practice. I don't care what any body says the last thing I am spending money on is an expensive duck call.
Not a bad call. My first one. But I'd definitely say the second one I got is easier not to mess up on. Takes less initial air pressure to initiate the tone.Check out the haydel dr-85
Oh cool, yeah I played Clarinet a little bit in school. That'll help you a lot. Especially for that 'feeding' sound the other gentleman was mentioning.I’ll look at those call you put up. I also play the saxophone and I heard it might help me with calling.
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I am getting back into WF hunting and recently bought a couple of calls. I don't plan on getting a ton of them, just a few so I decided to go with calls from a few small call companies. I have a call from C & S calls and a call from Singleton Game Calls. I am also going to buy a couple of RM Custom Calls. Then I am going to practice on my porch from Christmas to next season. If I can't call them in with what I got...it won't be the calls.What are some of the best duck call brands?
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I've been calling at ducks and geese since I was 6, this is my 30th season. I have always used a single reed, I tried a double reed but they don't have the range of a single reed call. Not even comparable. There's a reason that anyone calling in a competition whether it is main street, meat or live duck uses a single reed call and that is because of the range and tone. There's a lot of very good makers out there but I only ever talk about one, RM Custom Calls from North Carolina. Stump (the owner), makes an amazing call and while they may seem spendy, they are (in my opinion) the best. I have a CWF, FTM, Pothole and added a 410 last year. They're amazingly easy to use and once you figure how to plant your tongue properly and present air to the call, you will sound like a duck. Since you play the saxophone that shouldn't be a huge learning curve. I would recommend the 410 as a FTM or CWF can get really loud (they both scream, the CWF more so) and they can get away from you. The 410 has a raspy-nasally sound and I love the bottom end rattle you can get from it. The Pothole would also be a good choice to learn on but doesn't have quite the top end range that the 410 does. BTW, I have nothing to gain from Stump from this. I'm just a loyal customer and we share several very good mutual friends.What are some of the best duck call brands?
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My favorite brand is Echo. Rich-n-tone makes great calls. There are several top of the line call makers out there but those 2 are my favorites.What are some of the best duck call brands?
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