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Written By - Rod Haydel - 07/31/2007 |
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Keep your calls sounding natural sounding by sticking with the basics.
Fancy calling is best left on the stage calling judges, and in most
situations rarely in the duck blind.
The greeting call is what I use when I first see ducks at a distance.
It\'s a series of 5-7 notes in descending order at a steady even rhythm
(Kanc, Kanc, Kanc, Kanc, Kanc).
The comeback call is used when ducks don\'t respond to your greeting or
you want an immediate response such as in the timber. It\'s more urgent
sounding and faster (Kanckanc, Kanc, Kanc, Kanc).
A pleading call is usually followed by holding the first note a little
longer (Kaaanc, Kanc, Kanc, Kanc). These three series make up about 75%
of my calling. Another 20% are single quacks and a little feed calling.
As you can see I\'m not much on 30 note hail calls. I have yet to hear a
real hen call in this manner. I try to sound as natural as I can. Most
mallards I hear feed calling in the typical \"kitty, kitty, kitty\"
fashion are flying. While ducks actually feeding are more broken up and
erratic sounding (da-dit da-dit dit dit, da-dit dit). Also I have found
live hens only call to others after they have flown over the pond or
passed their location. Usually she\'ll give them only one comeback call.
Keep these points in mind:
- As long as the ducks are coming in forget calling.
- When they start an erratic wing beat; hit them with a comeback call immediately to bring them back on line.
- If they look as if they may drift off-line use single quacks and feed calls to bring them back online.
- Try
calling at birds as they circle when they quarter into the wind. This
will make it easier for them to set up for a landing zone into the
wind. (Anticipate their swing).
- Remember your whistle and
mix these sounds in with your mallard call. Youngsters can blow these
with ease and feel partly responsible for bringing the ducks in! The
mallard drake sound should not be discounted either especially on
windless days!
- Always start high and come down the scale smoothly with no \"start up note\".
- If
possible use a call that applies to the species your trying to call.
Talk their language (ex. blue-wing teal, use a blue-wing call).
- When team calling let one person be the leader and the other just fill in. Don\'t compete against yourselves.
- Realize that all ducks are not callable and that real ducks do not call in all the ducks all the time.
- Be different! If what you are doing isn\'t workingÂ…CHANGE.
Don\'t get stuck in a rut! Hopefully these points will help you sound
natural in the marsh; which is so very important late season and the
further south you hunt. Further north a caller can get by with a lot
more mistakes and has a chance to experiment a bit. Up till now, I have
discussed 95% of my calling in the field. What about the other 5%? You
didn\'t think I was going to let you in on all my secrets did you?