Duck Hunt

Duck scenes from our wetlands.

Some mallards working the north wade-in area in Henry B.

The "Henry B" designation references our map indexing system of wetlands and blind designation. After becoming a member, hunters gain access to our online map library listing all available hunting lands. The waterfowl maps are two pages. the first shows how to get to the wetlands, the second is a diagram of the wetlands layout and blind numbers.

A combo of mallards and pintail working Fisher's Lake.

Greenheads are the preferred duck. Many of our waterfowl hunters with dogs will duck hunt the early season for local greenheads and woodys, pheasant hunt until peak migration, return to duck hunt during the peak, close out the pheasant season in January and start in on late and spring goose. This schedule allows far more waterfowl hunts than most have the energy for and allows members to pick and chose to fit their schedule of when and what to hunt.

Our waterfowl hunts are the same as our upland bird hunts in they are both self guided and both included within our simply business model of one membership price for all regardless of their primary and secondary hunting interest.

One of our marsh wetlands.

We take existing wetlands along micro flyways in the Lower Missouri River Basin under the Mississippi Flyway and enhance them with levees, inflow/outflow gated pipes to control water level, allow draining and planting. Our duck blinds are well placed as our years of experience dictate, well separated and with our paid self guided hunter mentality public wetlands issues of setting up close, excessive calling, stealing flights, sky busting all fade away.

Unguided Duck Hunting

From Dave the Association's farthest away traveling duck hunter.

We feel the pressure of traveling hunters. The pictures above show great outdoor weather and poor duck hunting conditions. Dave travels over 1,000 miles to hunt with us and we do have the duck attracting wetlands and well camouflaged blinds. What we can not control is the weather and the migration. On the blue bird weather days that Dave had on this trip he did get ducks, just not as many as during past trips with duck moving weather. This is an example how throughout our web site and telephone conversations we will not oversell the hunt quality we can produce.

Duck hunts page 14

Unguided Duck Hunting
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Email or call 913 773 8110 Mid-America Hunting Association