If
you have never been hiding behind a tree or sitting in a blind watching a flock
of wild ducks circling decoys you have missed one of the most thrilling and
beautiful sights in the outdoors.
I am getting everything ready for my first duck hunt next week…not
expecting a whole lot perhaps. I
will be sitting behind a big fallen tree in the back of my favorite cove for
most of a day with Bolt, my Labrador, watching a handful of decoys before
me. I’ll take a notebook with me
and try to do some writing, and build a little campfire if it gets too
cold. Sometime in the mid day Bolt
and I will take a little walk up into the woods behind me and see how many buck
rubs we can find, or if there are any good photos to be taken, maybe look for
unusual rocks in the creek.
It
was once so easy to hunt from a boat blind, but today’s mallards have just seen
too many of them. By the time
mallards get south of the Missouri Iowa line, they have heard a few duck calls
and shotgun blasts. In Manitoba in
September, there are lots of young dumb ducks, and hunting there is great. There are almost no brightly colored
drakes, as they are just forming their winter plumage.
As
a kid I hated eating mallards because we ate lots of them, always pressure-cooked. Today I cut mallard breasts into
cross-cut steaks. You can get four
out of each side of a mallard, three from a gadwall, two from wood-ducks and
teal. Then you season the steaks,
put them on a skewer between pepper and onion slices, wrap a small piece of
bacon around each and put the skewer on a charcoal grill. Or you can make stroganoff out of
slices of duck meat, or fry finger-strip slices with onions. Don’t shoot mergansers! They aren’t any
good.
I may
kill a limit this week, expecting the first visits in our area from the
red-legged northern mallards. Or I
may set there all day and kill none.
But Bolt and I won’t come back at dark without having a great day. We will have some new photos, maybe a
couple of rocks like nothing I have found before and perhaps some really pretty
pieces of driftwood. And we will
not spend any time in city traffic, or hear one word spoken in anger. I kind of like days like that. But if I
get to wanting to eat a mallard or two... there is always the secluded ponds I
know about where I can sneak up over a pond bank and collect a really good
supper in a hurry. I’ll have more
to say about duck-hunting in a column to come in January… a column telling
anyone who wants to work at it how to eat ducks this winter.
Let
me take this opportunity to tell readers that they can order any of my outdoor
books or a subscription to my outdoor magazine by calling my office at
417-777-5227. But at Christmas, I
like to give away one of my books to kids who do not get much for Christmas. The name of the book is Dogs and Ducks
and Hatrack Bucks. It is a collection of well 28 illustrated short stories,
most about boys. I put it together
by digging out old magazine articles I wrote when I was very young. Many of them won awards of some kind or
another. If you know a boy or girl
of any age who loves the outdoors but maybe doesn’t read much… this may be a
treasure for him. Just call and
we’ll sign one and inscribe it to him or her if you will give us the name. All
I need is the postage to send it, and if you can’t afford that, call anyway and
I will pay the postage.
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