It was minus five when I departed Montana and an overcast 40 degrees when I arrived in Houston, Texas. Bill Reed met me at the airport and we were soon scouting birds. We found three or four locations with good concentrations of ducks or snow geese.
At 4 a.m. we met in the kitchen, poured a coffee and grabbed a donut. We piled into the Suburban, and we were soon on the way to the blind. With us were two Labradors; one young and relatively inexperienced; the other, Winnie, a seasoned veteran. Both labs were steady and great markers. Winnie handled like a dream and took lines and one whistle casts perfectly.
We made our way to the blind in pitch-black darkness. As dawn slowly surfaced on the eastern horizon, wings whistled above the blind in the cold darkness. It was calm and we could hear the yelps and murmurs of stirring geese in the refuge. “Ok, boys, load up and don’t forget that there is a one bird limit on pintails and it better be a drake,” Will Beaty announced.
Moments later, six teal decoyed and three stayed. Daylight revealed a bluebird morning, but there were ducks and geese moving, and we shot decoying singles, pairs and small flocks of scaup, Ggreen-winged teal, and gadwall, not hot and heavy shooting, but enough action to keep things interesting. The highlight of the hunt came just as we were about to be picked up. A flock of about 30 passing pintails 100 yards high turned to our calls.
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