Jump to content
  • GUESTS

    If You  want access  to member only forums on FM, You will need to Sign-in or  Sign-Up now .

    This box will disappear once you are signed in as a member.

Waterfowl Reports


Recommended Posts

Was going to take pics of some mallards but the guy that lives on the lake in this spot pushed snow into the spring and blocked off the area with netting so the ducks would not land there. Not sure why he did it?

They will have open water on the river on the other side of the lake or they wil be on the Mississippi soon

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The country is frozen all the way down to Arkansas.

I'll be there saturday. Cant wait.

It might still be OK, but you shoulda been there a week earlier!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Fishing on Green lake yesterday I heard and saw a lone goose fly over. What the ?? Not seen any waterfowl in the area since first ice.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah there's a place off hwy 61 in WBL that stays open all year and there are 100+ ducks there. On my way to work off hwy 36 by N St Paul Target someone feeds them so you can catch ducks and geese circling over the highway every once and a while.

But not geese this time of year, that's crazy.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

Seeing some new birds flying north and in medium sized V's. Hunting is closer than we think, especially for you spring light geese shooters.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah there's a place off hwy 61 in WBL that stays open all year and there are 100+ ducks there. On my way to work off hwy 36 by N St Paul Target someone feeds them so you can catch ducks and geese circling over the highway every once and a while.

But not geese this time of year, that's crazy.

There's a warm water discharge at the south end of Goose lake, right off of Hiway 61 and county road F. You'll find hundreds of mallards and few geese there year round. There is also open water by where I live and I see large flocks of geese, lots of divers and a few swans daily.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

HAVE BEEN SEEING A NOTICEABLE AMOUNT OF MALLARDS FLYING OVER OUR HOUSE THAT LAST FEW DAYS.

looks like spring is on its way

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was down in the Twin Cities this weekend visiting family in Hanover. Both days, I had a flock of about two dozen trumpeter swans fly over. That was cool! What a strange noise. Their name certainly fits the bill!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Those swans stay on the Mississippi river by Monticello all winter and they can be seen flying around that area quite often. If you ice fish Pelican lake, you'll see them multiple times flying over the lake just about every time you fish there. Good to have a good camera ready to take pictures.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for reminding me of the Swan Tyler I also Two of them in the open creek that feeds the north end of Little Elk Lake and I'm sure thats where the mallards were also landing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

drove from the cities to milaca and back yesterday saw lots of ducks, many pairs almost the whole way.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

Out shoveling snow and raking off garage,sheds,house roofs today. Must have been a small push of geese. Couple small flocks,pairs and singles flying around.Been outside all week and not seen or heard a thing till today.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Saw a pile of divers and swans on the only open water in my area. They are starting to show up, I'm sure the ice and cold has thrown them off some.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Geese are back to the lake in the city by my house, just hanging out on the ice. Been seeing swans too.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

There are now ringbill, some bluebill, and buffies in the Kohler open/warm water area across 61 from Goose Lake, along with the many many mallards. Won't be long and the redheads, cans and goldeneye and loons will be back. The eagle can be seen looking for meals of ducks, or eating them while on the ice at just about any time of day smile Swans still there too.

Always fun to watch the migration back north.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

Checked the boxes to make sure ready for nesting and found at least several eggs in the one box.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The wood ducks sure do look pretty with a snow for a back drop, and I noticed a bunch of bluebills in the cloverleaf on the south side of 10 and 101 in Elk River.

Noticed a bunch of ring-bills on the St. Francis River too.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Went for a drive the other day and saw mallards, woodies, bluebills, buffies, Cans, shovelers, hooded mergansers, mergansers, and ringnecks.

Found a flooded cornfield full of birds, and was surprised to see a bunch of shovelers in the group.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Got down to the TC this weekend. Left early in the morning, and saw wave after wave after wave of Canadas from the North Dakota line to Alexandria. Amazing sight. Drove the dog nuts.

At home, I saw a lot more ducks than I can remember, and a lot of divers! Buffies, ring necks and blubills, probably 50, in a tiny farm pond. Even a pretty dashing drake green-winged teal all dressed up for the spring dance. Pretty neat.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

I made the comment on saturday to my buddy.

"we usally are seeing Mallards on the lake this year we have bullbills"

By the way we where fishing in the Lonsdale area.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Seeing a few groups of goslings. I guess the cold, long winter didn't effect them. Haven't seen any ducklings.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Lots of goslings down in Owatonna, surprising since we got 15" of snow a couple weeks ago.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 months later...

I saw about 50 brown teal looking ducks in a small farm pond that has only held a few ducks all summer. Looks limlke there could be a few flying ducks by opening weekend again this year. That is unless they all walked there. grin

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

Out scouting today in W Central MN. Of course there were geese. Lots of BWT, woodies and mallards. Even a couple divers on a big slough. Good rice crop & water levels seem up versus last year. Still some VERY small ducks around. Found one pond loaded with ducks - we bumped em out. Still a dozen or so little buff colored fur balls - looked like they couldn't even fly!

Good luck next wknd!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Heard someone say that the safest ducks come Saturday will be the non flyers...will just melt into the cattails...probably true

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Was hunting geese in a pasture last weekend. Didn't do well on the geese but I did have about 200-250 redheads flying back and forth on the small creek I was hunting next to about every 15-20 mins, 25-30 yards away, made for some good entertainment. For other ducks, I saw 1 can, couple bluebills, couple shovelers, couple mallards, couple gadwalls and a couple bwteal, wasn't overly impressed with the amount of ducks besides the redheads. NE Nodak

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




  • Your Responses - Share & Have Fun :)

    • Brianf.
      Mother Nature gave me quite a thrill on Father's Day. 
    • LakeofthewoodsMN
      On the south end...   The walleyes are biting!  A great week of fishing with a combination of jigging and pulling spinners the go to methods.     Most walleye fishing is taking place between 21 - 24' of water.  When you locate fish on your electronics, either anchor up and jig or simply drift with spinners and crawlers (or troll if there is no wind) through the schools.   When jigging, gold combined with a bright color such as glow white, pink, orange or chartreuse is a hard combo to beat.  Use a fathead minnow, rainbow or a frozen emerald shiner.     When hooking the minnow, it is helpful to hook the minnow through the mouth and out the gills, pushing the minnow all the way up the hook to the jig head.  Re-hook the minnow as far back as possible.  This will catch the short biting fish.    Use a two ounce bottom bouncer with a two or three hook snelled spinner and a nightcrawler.  Some good blade colors are gold or gold combined with gold, orange, glow red or pink.   As happens most years in June, another good walleye bite fired up in various areas of the south shore in 5 - 10 feet of water.  Oftentimes, minnows spawning pulls in hungry walleyes creating some excellent fishing.     Some big walleyes over 30 inches being caught, along with the eaters, smalls and slot fish between 19.5 - 28 inches that must be released.   Anglers can keep a combined limit of 6 walleyes and saugers.  Up to 4 can be walleyes.  All walleyes 19.5 - 28.0 inches must be released.  One fish over 28 inches may be kept. On the Rainy River...  The river is flowing with a strong current.  Consequently, fish are being found in areas just out of the current.     Jigging with a minnow is effective when you are on fish.  Otherwise, pulling spinners and trolling crankbaits along shoreline breaks against the current in 6 - 12' of water is producing a mixed bag of walleyes, saugers, pike, smallmouth bass and an occasional crappie.   The Lake Sturgeon season opens July 1st.     The river is a great summer option with 42 miles of navigable river and many nice boat ramps.   Up at the NW Angle...  The fish are snapping up at the Angle.  Another great week of fishing amongst the 14,552 islands in these parts.     Minnesota waters are producing nice walleyes. Some fish being found off of deeper structure.  Some nice opportunities are shallow based on forage, hatches, minnows spawning, etc. Pulling spinners with shiners or crawlers has been effective.  When you are on "a spot on a spot", jigging is the best technique.     Trolling crankbaits is working well and is a nice way to cover water and put your lure in front of a lot of fish.     In addition to walleyes, saugers, pike, jumbo perch, crappies, pike and smallmouth bass are also in the mix.   Muskie anglers caught some nice fish this past week.  No specific pattern as the cold spring has fish still settling into summer.  The lake boasts a healthy population of fish, many in excess of 50 inches.
    • Jetsky
      I'm catching them on bobbers and leeches.  Try fishing smaller side bays on the edge of some rocks but not in the rocks.  Fish in about 6 - 10 feet of water.  The bite starts about 7:30 pm till 9:00 pm.  I also noticed a few may flys hatching in the areas I'm getting success.  I think they're coming into the bays in the evening to feed on the mayflies.
    • SkunkedAgain
      Generally I agree with your assessment Gimruis. Nobody likes a nanny state, but the harsh reality is that without rules and regulations far too many people take advantage of limited natural resources. There are those that will never follow the rules regardless, as well as those that don't recognize that as more people catch more fish, we all need to keep less.   I've eaten a few SM in my life, and they taste just as good as a walleye or northern. However, I would bet that 80% or closer to 90% of all people catching SM practice catch-and-release. Therefore I am not sure what a slot is going to do in this specific situation. Maybe the DNR has some good theories but I doubt the main culprit is the number of large SM being kept for food. I assume that it is a contributing factor but not the main one.
    • gimruis
      Honestly the only way you are going to catch more muskies is to put more time in targeting them.  If they aren't willing to bite, you aren't going to catch any.  Its not like walleye or bass or panfishing where if a fish is in a neutral mood you can still maybe get one to bite.  The bite window is shorter and briefer with muskies and there isn't nearly as many of them either.  You could fish for a week straight without a mere sign of one and then when a bite window opens you might catch several quickly.   I would focus on weedy areas with good cabbage.  Target periods of higher potential like sunrise, sunset, cloudy/rainy days, and at night time if you are able to.  I wouldn't use really big lures yet either.  Downsize a little until late summer and then you can beef it up with bigger lures.
    • gimruis
      If this theory is accurate, then we've created our own problem here by keeping too many sizable ones and not enough smaller ones.  Its no different than the problem we've created with northern pike populations in many lakes that are full of stunted, smaller aggressive ones and lacking sizable ones.   Most fish this far north take a significant amount of time to reach larger size.  Removing these larger fish takes time to replace.  For many years, the regulations in Mille Lacs for smallmouth was only 1 fish over 21 inches.  Now, you can only keep fish under 17 inches.  I believe the regulations in this lake is what has made it what it is today.  Relying on anglers to do the right thing to overall better the status of a fishery rarely works.  We tend to rape and pillage for too long until the problem can't be fixed anymore.
    • MikeG3Boat
      Had another tough fishing weekend.  No walleyes for me.  I don't know what I am doing wrong, I am marking fish around the reefs in the mid 20 ft of water, but nothing is biting.   Where are some of these bobber spots people are talking about?  Any help would be appreciated, I just can't seem to get this figured out.  I am over on the west end of big bay.  I willing to drive a ways if it will be worth my time.  
    • smurfy
    • smurfy
    • Jetsky
      LOL Skunked, I believe you're probably right.   No Muskies but they caught their limit of eaters and one of them caught a 26 incher.  So a successful trip for them.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.