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    • Geese see a lot of decoys

      Image courtesy of naturfotografen-forum.de

      naturfotografen-forum.de

      • It’s no secret that decoying geese is a thrill. They are big birds and noisy in the air. Seeing geese close in on the spread and hearing them get louder as they come into range makes any waterfowler’s heart pound. But geese see a lot of decoys, and yours has to be set in the right place at the right time and look good, too.
      www.fieldandstream.com/gear/best-goose-decoys/
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  2. Aug 27, 2012 · Plus, geese are far larger and more visible than ducks, attracting them from great distances. Yet despite all the success Canadians have shooting ducks over goose spreads, Americans rarely use the strategy. It's as if we believe we don't hunt the same birds.

    • You Have to Get Right on The X
    • Plan For Hunting Traffic Birds
    • Scout Right
    • Hide Better
    • You Need Overhead Cover
    • Use An A-Frame to Field Hunt
    • Try A Layout Blind on The Edge
    • Play The Sun
    • Set Field Decoys The Right Way
    • Use Fewer Decoys

    The most important aspect of decoying ducks and geese is location, says Zink. But you’re going to have to be more specific than that if you want to consistently take waterfowl. “Knowing the exact spot is important, but just part of the whole puzzle,” he says. “There is always an exact location where ducks and geese want to be because of available f...

    If you hunt where migrating birds, unfamiliar with local feeding spots, are coming through or if you’re in a permanent blind and unable to move to the X, you might need to consider a Plan B. “It helps to understand what ducks and geese look for,” says Zink. “New birds want other birds on the water to flock with, especially during migration time. Us...

    Understanding what hungry birds are looking for can also help you zero in on the X. “The most successful hunters I know, work the hardest at scouting,” says Zink. What’s true about birds knowing where grain is in fields is true about natural food sources in marshes as well. Vegetation like Pennsylvania smartweed, wild barnyard grass, and nutsedge d...

    “Where most people go wrong, and it’s not something that’s talked about or focused on, is the art of camouflage and hiding,” says Zink. “But it’s also where 90 percent of hunts fail.” A lot of hunters don’t take advantage of natural vegetation. Instead of using it as cover, they consider it an obstacle, anchoring their boat on the outside of vegeta...

    Complete camouflage, including overhead cover, is a must. Zink says that he’s pulled into a local hunting area with 15 hunting rigs in the parking lot and “I can stand on the top of my boat on the boat ramp and look out over the marsh and I can typically find all 15 of them.” Zink takes the time to camouflage, paying attention to every detail, gras...

    For field hunting, Zink has poured a lifetime of hunting knowledge into the Avian X A-Frame Blind, developed after drone footage of their field spreads showed ground blinds sticking out like a sore thumb. “I was amazed at how much ground blinds stick out from above,” says Zink. “They look like picnic tables in a decoy spread. How we shoot anything ...

    Zink helped design and develop the first ground blinds for Final Approach. “I’ve been using them in the Midwest from the very beginning,” says Zink, “and by the early to mid-2000s, geese especially were almost impossible to kill out of them because they just knew what they were.” So, Zink started setting his ground blind on field edges by fence row...

    Use sunlight to your advantage, but to do so you need to know if you are hunting migrating birds new to the area or local birds coming to an X they’ve chosen before. If you’re hunting migrating birds (or you can’t get on the X but are in an area where birds are flying back and forth), position your set-up so the sun is at their back and in your fac...

    Knowing how well-educated your birds are is important. “Take Canada geese, for example,” says Zink. “The more educated they are, the smaller spread I use. If they’re really smart, I might use three, five, six decoys, because they are already coming there. If you set up a hundred decoys, they’re probably not going to come to you very well, especiall...

    On calm days, Zink becomes a minimalist. “When there’s no wind, I use a much smaller decoy spread because it’s more natural for a dozen, 16 or 18 geese to be somewhat motionless than it is have two or three hundred and all of them motionless,” says Zink. “Ducks and geese on the ground move a tremendous amount—ducks will really move, running from ke...

    • Joe Arterburn
  3. Oct 13, 2023 · Need a solution to scare geese off your property? Learn why decoys aren't the best option. Contact Go Geese Go today for professional geese control services.

  4. Sep 16, 2024 · A combination of floating, full-body, and silhouette goose decoys on the water and across the levee created a realistic display for the area's specklebellies and snow geese. Being strategic with the goose floaters was important, as these big-bodied decoys can fill up a lot of space, which could limit open water and potential landing zones.

  5. Aug 26, 2022 · An affordable, custom silhouette, Real-Geese's latest addition to its impressive decoy line — the Xclipse Shadow Series — is winning waterfowling hearts. These two-sided silhouettes showcase a non-reflective, textured surface, and the lightweight plastic boosts durability while keeping weight down.

  6. Aug 31, 2024 · Goose Hunting Basics. Goose hunting can be pretty complicated. Oftentimes 10 or more hunters will work together for a big shoot with hundreds of decoys. But it doesnt have to be this way. Those big field shoots are effective, but you can also hunt geese solo or with just a few buddies.