https://oodmag.com/finding-downed-birds/
Watching birds fall will tell you how badly they were hit, determining how you go about your retrieve. Be quiet and have your gun handy.
Printable View
https://oodmag.com/finding-downed-birds/
Watching birds fall will tell you how badly they were hit, determining how you go about your retrieve. Be quiet and have your gun handy.
All good points made. Have and do implement alot of the suggestions mention.
The only addendum I'd make, and maybe it doesn't need to be mention, if you think you've cripple the bird and try as you may can't find it might want to consider it part of your daily limit.
My beagle finds everything for me. A good dog is a must in the uplands. But the disappointment of not finding a downed cripple is bad! I remember looking for a crippled woodcock for more than two hours. I knew it went down. Marked the spot, and it vanished! I searched everywhere!!!! It's an awful feeling!
I'm not sure I'd agree with that "But a dogless hunter can recover downed birds effectively too". If you've every hunted over a good dog, hunting without one feels strangely similar to leaving your shotgun and home and relying on throwing rocks you hope you'll find on the way.
May temper it down to "But a dogless hunter can recover downed birds too".
When dogless but with a partner, the shooter doesn’t budge an inch from where he took the shot. He then verbally guides his partner to where he marked the bird’s fall. The partner does all the searching.
With or without a dog, sometimes the bird doesn’t make it to the ground; it gets hung up in a tree or bush. Especially with woodcock, but I’ve even had a pheasant get hung up. Look up.
My son had no idea he hit this one until our dog came out of the fir thicket with the bird in its mouth. In dog we trust.https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...a949cde6bf.jpg
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk