Banner Ad

Womens Waterfowl Hunt

Elizabeth Annette | All Hunting Articles
Posted 11/24/2012




Peak Adventure Outfitters and Texas Parks and Wildlife have partnered again this year to bring you the annual Womens Waterfowl Hunt. We will be instructing on technique, calling, spreads and more on Friday night followed by a hunt the next morning to put your new skills into action! We will be hunting on a new Ducks Unlimited property near Nada, Tx.

Price includes training and fun the night before, cabin, guides, gundogs, blind, dressing a duck and recipes. $150 for single bunk & $165 for double.
 

Tags

 

Related Aritlces

C-C-C-Cold-Weather Canine Care

Posted on Wednesday 31st December 1969 06:00:00 PM

Our October and November waterfowl hunts weren’t anything to write about. Air temps north of us hovered between 70-and-82 degrees Fahrenheit, and with all of that open water those birds weren’t in a hurry to go anywhere. A bone-chilling cold snap rolled in just before Christmas, and it spanned half of the East Coast from Canada to Maryland. The season’s entire migration seemed to arrive all at once.

Continue Reading

 

Best hunting dog breeds for wetland hunting

Posted on Wednesday 31st December 1969 06:00:00 PM

Waterfowl hunting demands a special kind of dog — one that thrives in cold, muddy conditions, works calmly from a blind, and has the grit to plunge into icy water after a downed bird. Not every hunting breed is built for that challenge, but a select few have been bred for generations to master the wetlands. These dogs combine powerful swimming ability, a weatherproof coat, a soft mouth for careful retrieves, and an unshakable desire to work beside their handler through rain, sleet, and wind.

Continue Reading

 

Training Your Retriever for Double Duty

Posted on Wednesday 31st December 1969 06:00:00 PM

If you own a waterfowl dog, chances are that sooner or later you're going to ask it to perform upland duty. It might be a pheasant hunt as a sideline to your Dakota duck hunt, or maybe an afternoon of quail hunting after a morning goose hunt. Most retrievers handle their second job pretty well. You can help your dog perform that job even better.

Continue Reading

 


0 Posted Comments - Add your own comment



Banner Ad