Duck hunting used to be my favorite thing on Earth. I was truly obsessed to the point that I moved from WI to WA specifically because of their 107 day duck season and Puget sound wintering grounds...yes, that obsessed!
Things that make it way more fun in order from most important to least.
1) get a dog. I'll never duck hunt again without a dog, truly makes the hunt. I was blessed with an incredible field Golden "Super" Cooper as my first hunting buddy and he and I have watched more sunrises, greenheads get folded, teal swarms get blasted, etc. than any duo should have the right to experience. The bond with a good bird dog is indescribable, truly a best friend.
2) scout/plan in the off-season. There is nothing more exciting than hiking into a spot you saw birds in or that looked ducky in the off-season, once fall hits. Sometimes it's a bust, but most of the time you'll kill a few. Build a brush blind, stash some dekes, whatever... the prep and anticipation is half the fun. Here in MT, I only hunt small beaver ponds that I have to bike or hike into, or canoe only spots. Knowing there is a 0% chance of seeing other hunters and 100% chance of filling a strap of greenheads and woodies gets you out of bed a lot easier than combat hunting near a well known refuge, lake, river etc.
3) get a really nice shotgun. Has nothing to do with vanity. High end waterfowl shotguns are flat out amazing tools. Pulling a gun that's special to you out of its case adds a lot of enjoyment to the hunt for me. When I upgraded from my old Remington pump to a Winchester SX4 it was a major infusion of fun to the hunt, not to mention the amount of misses went to basically zero. I've added a few since then and they all come with that warm n fuzzy feeling haha.
4) last one is to learn up on waterfowling culture/history. Similar in nature to upland hunting and fly fishing, there is a beautiful legacy aspect to waterfowling that a lot of new waterfowlers are entirely unaware of. I was fortunate to learn from a good friend that grew up on the shores of Lake Winnebago, a waterfowling mecca in the Midwest. He had learned from a rag tag bunch of old timers and they passed on a true reverence for the process. From hand carving decoys, repurposing feathers for tying flies, collecting waterfowl artwork, etc. I find that approach more satisfying than the energy drink pounding, sky blasting, dude bro duck hunters who hit the scene circa 2020.
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