Ideas for mobile/highly portable hide for ducks?

Macintosh

WKR
Joined
Feb 17, 2018
Messages
2,770
Hoping to gather some ideas to put in my toolbox. This was really my first season duck hunting, Ive been a dozen times or so with friends over the years, but having fun with the steep learning curve on my own. Another month to go in our season. Im mainly hunting marshes and rivers off a very large lake, usually via kayak as most spots arent accessible by land, and my tin boat sticks out like a sore thumb. Teal and wood ducks early, now mallards and black ducks after the other birds have mostly all moved out. Zero cornfield-type hunting for ducks so thats not in play. Early season it was easy to tuck me and the kayak into cattails and thick marsh grass and get a good hide. Lately, the ducks have all been on the bigger water around river deltas, and they donsee a good bit of pressure. The skittish ducks, far more sparse vegetation and very low water has me tearing my hair out trying to get a good hide thats within range of where ducks will land. Think 200 yards of exposed ground with sparse/low vegetation that is normally “water”. There are some wild rice stands in the water where ducks are landing, but its very low and sparse so even lying in my sit in top kayak in it is very obvious. A few beached logs here and there, but that’s the exception. What have folks done that is highly portable (1-1.5 mile kayak to get to hunting location) to create a good hide in conditions like this? I just ordered a badminton net that I plan to cut to length & attach cattails and wild rice stalks to, roll up with a few stakes and tie-outs, for a fast and easy to set up blind. A layout chair seems like it’d be great in a (very) few situations, but not sure about using one in 6-8” of water. Any other tips or ideas, especially with pictures? Id really appreciate anything you have done that has worked well for you.
Thanks in advance!
 
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OneGunTex

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 16, 2021
Messages
112
Location
Texas, most of the time
If by myself or with 1 other person, i have had good luck hiding the boat a couple hundred yards from my spread and hiding myself under a shrub or clump of vegetation. No blind, no nothing. You can keep yourself much lower profile and stiller than a pile of unnatural gear/camo/vegetation.

With 3+ people, I would still hide the boat(s) further away and use a panel blind, brushed in with whatever vegetation you can find (bring it with you if you have to) and sit on marsh seats or similar. Even better than a commercial panel blind is a couple of stakes/t-posts rolled up with some fencing.

If totally exposed like you suggest and in water, perhaps some sort of brush-covered tarp or something that you could drape over your kayak? I think that's a hard.

Overall, I disagree with most folks that an impeccable hide is the most important thing. If you are where the birds want to be, you don't need decoys or calls or a blind or nothing. If you are trying to hunt someplace where 1) the birds aren't naturally going and 2) it's hard to hide, maybe find another spot?
 
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M

Macintosh

WKR
Joined
Feb 17, 2018
Messages
2,770
Thanks.

Thats the issue, I know where the birds want to be, and that’s almost universally where the hardest hide is. Weve had birds coming in quite a lot and flaring just out of range. Even a panel blind—at least the ones Ive seen—is tough to get there in the kayak. I have one of those camo nets, which weve staked up and then brushed in, but half the time you stand back 50 yards and look at it and it still sticks out like a motor-home parked in an empty parking lot because with the water so low there’s only very low and sparse natural vegetation so far from the normal shoreline to begin with, so zero brush or other stuff to hide in most places. Already using a minimal setup, no spinners just some minor motion to a few decoys. Trying to toe the line between being extremely portable, while also actually capable of hiding, and after stepping back to look at it I feel like the hide is by far the weakest link in this case.
 

Ikmclean

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 2, 2021
Messages
265
Location
Ten Sleep, WY
I've had luck with the backpack style layout blinds, mines a tanglefree ground ghost. I use it mostly on mud flats hunting the river channel when water is low or on open gravel bars without much cover.
 

dtrkyman

WKR
Joined
Oct 2, 2014
Messages
3,191
Use a battery powered hedge trimmer and trim a bunch of vegetation close by that matches the area, then just pack in the trimmings and make a hide.

You can use a couple pieces of pvc for end posts and some plastic snow fence of similar to make a panel.

Youtube should have tons of videos to look at for ideas.
 
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M

Macintosh

WKR
Joined
Feb 17, 2018
Messages
2,770
Thanks. Yes, lots in youtube, much of which seems a bit different than what Im doing, and much of the “influencer” stuff that is somprevalent comes off as more of a infommercial so I dont trust it. so hoping to get some suggestions that are real-life tested. That idea is exactly the plan for the badminton net I have on the way.
 
Joined
Mar 2, 2019
Messages
488
Not sure what you want to spend but, check out four rivers or county line boats for ideas.
 
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