AK_Skeeter
WKR
I solo hunt 99% of the time, just me and one of my labs.
Sometimes it can be challenging.
One strategy that has worked well for me is to put the lab in cattails and hustle in front
of the direction the dog is crashing to. If there is a body of water, often it is a swim for the retrieve.
Another strategy that has worked well for me is solo hunting down canyons.
I start by climbing up out of view of a cattail canyon up to the top then cross over to canyon
and put the lab in cattails and push roosters towards the bottom.
Most hunters would start at the bottom only to have the roosters run up canyon,
run out of cover and flush way out of range.
In steep terrain, I've had success letting the lab run way out of range and flushing birds that then
fly down overhead. That worked well on steep avalanche chutes with blue grouse eating mountain ash berries
and with chuckar on super steep slopes.
Sometimes it can be challenging.
One strategy that has worked well for me is to put the lab in cattails and hustle in front
of the direction the dog is crashing to. If there is a body of water, often it is a swim for the retrieve.
Another strategy that has worked well for me is solo hunting down canyons.
I start by climbing up out of view of a cattail canyon up to the top then cross over to canyon
and put the lab in cattails and push roosters towards the bottom.
Most hunters would start at the bottom only to have the roosters run up canyon,
run out of cover and flush way out of range.
In steep terrain, I've had success letting the lab run way out of range and flushing birds that then
fly down overhead. That worked well on steep avalanche chutes with blue grouse eating mountain ash berries
and with chuckar on super steep slopes.