
Kansas City duck hunting clubs exist in various forms ranging from individual duck blind leases to wetlands clubs to Mid-America Hunting Association being unique to other options.
Those unique aspect include: unguided duck hunting, multiple duck blinds available over multiple wetlands, wet and dry land hunts as well as pheasant, deer and turkey hunting.
Why Our Duck Hunting Is Where It Is
Nothing fancy about our unguided duck hunting that is until getting to our private wetlands and permanent blinds. While these too are not fancy they are very effective.

While our Missouri wetlands map above seems to have Kansas City surrounded on three sides it is not that we select our wetlands relative to any area other than where waterfowl want to be. These Missouri wetlands are within the three sub-basins that compose the larger Lower Missouri River Basin. Our wetlands are further defined within the micro flyways of of those sub-basins. The key factor of these micro flyways are large standing water structure within the agricultural regions of Missouri. This brings the right combination of water and food that with our frequently mild winter weather creates the conditions for migration layover.
Not A Duck Hunting Club
We offer this short description as we do fight an identity bias that we are a Kansas City Duck Club. We would rather not have that identity.
The identity we seek is that we a business. As a business we seek to spend money where we get the most return for our hunters. In this case it is to spend money within the micro flyways developing existing wetlands to maximize their waterfowl attracting characteristics. It is this single minded focus that a quality hunt is based on quality habitat.
Such banger days are always worth a picture and such days do not happen as often as any of us would like. These are samples of various hunters on several good days.
It is better to agree that our duck hunting is about the quality of the hunt. Rarely is anyone that hunts our Missouri wetlands is ever disappointed by the quality of our blinds and wetlands. After that it is just a matter of migration and weather.


