Thank you Utah Waterfowl Association

Be sure to head on over to Utah Waterfowl Association

Below you will find the 2012 Waterfowl Hunting Forecasts for the following areas:

OGDEN BAY WMA

Marsh and Impoundment Conditions:
Unit 1 – Pondweed growth is excellent on main and fair in the secondary impoundments. Over 1,200 ac of phragmites in the central area have been grazed after an earlier herbicide treatment which reopened up the marsh area.  In the secondary impoundments some phrag was retreated this year.  
Unit 2 – 600ac east side phragmites overgrowth was reopened by experimental grazing this summer. A similar, smaller treatment resulted in excellent hunting two years ago. The area has started being flooded, but will mostly be low for the youth hunt.
Unit 3 – Pondweed growth is good again this year as the stands developed over the last three years have thickened and enlarged. A huge new principally alkali bulrush and salcornia marsh west of outer dike is flooded after a summer drawdown and is in excellent condition.  The east side of the Main impoundment is unfortunately overgrowing, but 600ac to the east is in drawdown and an over 100 ac grazing allotment helped open up the area. Some additional small phrag areas were chemically treated also. Two newer impoundments on this unit are 
 finished and developing aquatic vegetation.
Weber Delta – South Weber Delta is fair with over 200ac in the three newer ponds and a seasonally flooded flats water system, which is currently low but filling. The “Big Pond” is filling and was grazed to reduce perimeter vegetation overgrowth this summer.  North Weber Delta is fair with the main river impoundment currently flooded and the east dump basin is dry, but starting to fill.
Pintail – Fair with some good new marsh area, but phragmites expanded westward this summer again. The water on this area is very low(see Access section below).
 
Generally all major impoundments are full and overflowing onto the westward flats. Marsh conditions are very good to excellent in most  areas. The Great Salt Lake is still receded and near its all time low, which allowed large areas of west flats to regenerate vegetation. Phragmites control by drawdown, grazing, or herbicide projects occurred in several sections of marsh and they may appear drought stricken, but are now flooding.

Bird Numbers:
Unit 1 – Good, in the main impoundments. Incredible numbers of birds are starting to build in the larger interior flats, which were reopened by grazing and are now flooded. The largest concentration of geese in over 10 years was recently observed on the flats north end. Better numbers of ducks are starting to use secondary ponds, also.
Unit 2 – Poor with larger numbers on the south grazing area. Further west flats and far north end ponds are expected, like last year, to gain large number of birds when these areas totally refill and interior hunting forces them out there.
Unit 3 – Excellent in the main impoundment, excellent on west flats and improved on the smaller impoundments. 
Weber Delta – Fair in general, but numbers will increase as these areas refill. It is holding a fair number of geese. Ducks are thickly concentrated in the larger ponds and impoundments
Pintail – Poor now and with an expectation of increasing to excellent numbers later on west side flats towards the Great Salt Lake.

Generally, birds are mostly concentrated on larger impoundments or ponds and flats in Unit 1 and 3.  Remote ponds and flats way west of impoundments will increasingly hold larger numbers of birds as they are displaced in easily accessible areas by hunters pre-hunt scouting activities and the Youth Hunt. 

Access:   
Good vehicle access with most roadways and parking lots mowed and in fair to good shape.  All access road will be graded by the general opener. 
 
Boat channels into main impoundments of Unit 1 and east side are clear and usable.  Unit 3 boat channel will be a tight fit, but has been sprayed with herbicide to open it up. There is a temporary equipment bridge blocking the East Dike Channel between North and Middle Runs. Boaters wanting to go upriver from the Northeast Parking Lot launch should go immediately left and east up North Run. A boat channel has been excavated around the south most, lowest walk bridge across the East Dike channel. A handicap accessible boat dock has been placed near the boat ramp into Unit 1 at parking lot number three.

Due to low river levels, the Pintail Flats airboat channels will not be useable out to the Great salt Lake for the Youth Hunt. Boats can get most the way down the South channel currently. The South and West Airboat Access Channel should be fully usable later on and we herbicide treated phragmites along both channels and mowed some areas earlier. The West Airboat Channel is less congested and now preferred by most all air boaters when it fills.  

There will be some temporary head gate replacement construction activates that may interfere with hunting some impoundment areas for a day or two. There will also survey teams and heavy equipment working along river channels east side river channels throughout the fall.
 
Hunting Forecast: 
The Youth Hunt will be exceptional in the main impoundments and adjacent flats. The General Opener should be very good as well.  Hunting should improve as the season progresses and new birds arrive after all the pre-hunt scouting and opening weekend pressures subsides. Huge numbers of birds are forecast this year from the north. Hunters in general will find the best hunting in the better habitat and bird concentration areas detailed before. Particularly, the huge phrag graze treatment area south of the West North Run Parking Lot is expected to provide excellent walk in hunting this fall. Pintail Flats and Weber River Channels should again be the best late season areas. 

Harold Crane WMA 

Marsh Conditions:
Main Impoundments- Excellent aquatic vegetation growth. In the marsh, over 800 ac of east and west impoundments’ phragmites has been retreated chemically last year and reopened by livestock grazing this year. Exterior Flats-Good. All flats to west, north and east are being flooded. A  
small impoundment to the northwest was repaired and is filling. Willard Spur has much less water than last year on this date is very shallow!
Rainbow Unit- Fair, Rainbow pond was partially dry during the summer, but it has more water than most years at this time. The ponds on the north end and along the GSL Mineral canal are almost full. The area north of the Rail Trail has been chemical treated for phrags and is listed for burning ASAP
Generally, marsh and impoundments conditions are improved due to major habitat manipulations.

Bird Numbers:  
Main Impoundments- Incredible numbers of both ducks and geese are the west and east impoundments ponds and grazed flats. The south impoundment is holding the least birds. Higher late summer bird use the last few years has been noted and this years is particularly exceptional, but preseason scouting and youth hunt will temporarily displace some birds 
Exterior Flats- Fair, birds are in flooded flats close to the north and west dikes. Outward areas were drier than normal this year
Rainbow Unit- fair with some birds on the Rainbow Pond and much better duck and goose numbers on the north ponds and along GSL Mineral Canal. Goose numbers are overall good and improved. 
The two years ago moderate level botulism outbreak has not occurred in the Willard Spur to the north, but we have had late September outbreaks on hot, high bird density years like this one and few sick birds may be found. Many of the bird recover in the fresher water on Crane. Avoid handling or allowing your dog to handle any located sick or dead birds. 

Access: 
The road with three parking lots accessing the west Rainbow Unit is in good shape.  The main Harold Crane parking lot has been enlarged, also. All main impoundments are at normal water levels. The south impoundment is full, but now will be held at slightly lower compromise level after an agreement was finished with other agencies and upstream landowners.
 Newer north bound water distribution channels located near the center dike, in both the east and west impoundments provide improved access for those willing to carry small boats across the south dike. The east access channel into the non-motorized boating only, east unit will be cleaned before the general hunt and is partially blocked right now. A newer east impoundment boat launch was installed a couple years ago.  This channel starts at the west end of the main parking lot. A handicap accessible boat dock has been placed in the south impoundment.

The federal Bureau of Reclamation road to Harold Crane through Willard Upland Game Bird Area will be graded before the general hunt by DWR.  The installed much larger head gates in the South Drain channel around Willard Bay Reservoir, include under the main road to Crane.  The head gate bridges are slightly narrower than the road, so be careful. 
Hunt Forecast: 
 Should be great for the youth hunt and general opener if the birds stick around!  Many of the remote areas will not be hunted on the youth hunt and should provide excellent hunting on the General Opener for anyone willing to expend a little extra effort. Because the Willard Spur is so low some of the huge numbers of birds may leave prematurely. 

Howard Slough WMA 

Marsh Conditions:
Good. In main impoundments water is at full pool/spilling levels and contain excellent pondweed growth. New extensive phrag marshes have developed west and south of main impoundments and were chemically treated along the Main impoundment dike. Some seasonal, small ponds on the Hooper Hot Springs Unit are full and the phrag throughout the whole unit was chemically treated.  An older 280ac of phrag treatment area has been grazed again to control regrowth on the east side of the main impoundment near the popular “Shotgun Alley” location.  

Bird Numbers:
Exceptionally high bird numbers are in main impoundments, the grazed area. Some are way west of the marsh areas along lakefront. Generally duck numbers have been holding well above average and goose numbers have increased substantially. 
 
Access:
The access road is a little bumpy but will be graded by the general opener. There will be some temporary, one or two day construction activates along the east          impoundment dike that may temporally disturb some hunters.

Hunting Forecast:
The Slough had the best WMA Youth Hunt success in the region last year and should be great again this year.  It should hunt well throughout the season also. For its’ size it holds up very well under extremely heavy hunting pressure and particularly on high duck number years such as this one.

Youth Day in Utah

This is a great event in Northern Utah if you have kids or not.  I wish I was going to be in the area to help out.  If you can make it get down there and if not contact the Utah Waterfowl Association and let them know that you support what they are doing in helping to educate the future of our sport.            utahwaterfowl@gmail

 

“Please join us September 15, 2012, for the annual Utah Waterfowl Association youth day at the Farmington Bay Waterfowl Management Area.  This will be our 8th year to put this together for the kids.  In the past years we have had anywhere from 300 to 500 people attend.  It is a great event to get kids out into the marshes and learn more about waterfowl and waterfowl hunting.  This event is FREE.  We will have demonstration tables and booths that provide hands-on games and activities. The purpose of this event is to get the kids involved in hunting and fishing and the great outdoors.  We let the kids go around to each “station ” from 8 to 12 then we feed them followed by a huge drawing so that each one of them goes home with a prize.   The Utah Airboat Association and the Utah Motor Association will give the kids free rides during the event which has always been a favorite and exciting way to see the marsh. The first 300 kids will get a free duck call.  If you would like to help out and make this an even better day for the kids please feel free to contact the UWA. “

I am back

 

First of all I would like to apologize for not writing in while.  I have been in the middle of my guide season and I did not have a computer to bring to Dutch John.  Well that changed, I now have a new MacBook Pro.  Fishing has been great so I blew some of my tip money on a new computer.  Lucky me.

I have been seeing a ton of ducks on the river the last few months.  It looks like the mergansers and Mallards had a great year.  There are just tons of young birds.  I can not wait till they start to color up.  Down on the lower river I am hearing quite a few geese too.  October can not come quick enough.

Here are a few photos of what I have been up to as of late.  If you follow me on facebook or Instagram it wont be anything new.

Burning Some Phrag

Burning Some Phrag

This is really needing to happen out on our Utah WMAs. This is about a mile west of the visitors center. I will post up some more information when I get it.

 

Now that is a lot of ducks.  I LOVE the hit at the 2:14 mark.

Willard Spur and Bear River Bay

Here is a little update from  the Utah Waterfowl Association

 

To those who are interested in the wetlands of the Willard Spur and Bear River Bay (and the ducks that need it), here is the latest update.

Background: When Willard/Perry wanted to build a new wastewater treatment plant in Willard (next to Willard Spur), The Utah Waterfowl Association joined other concerned groups to contest the permit unless there were protections against massive water pollution from the sewer plant’s outflow. The sewage plant agreed to add some additional treatments, and all parties finally agreed to allow the plant to begin operations in exchange for testing and monitoring of water in the Spur and Bear River Bay.

Update: After a year of testing they have found some very interesting info about the water quality in the Spur/BR Bay area. The area still has very clean water despite massive amounts of nutrients flowing in from cattle grazing east of the area. The sewage plant was only responsible for about 2% of this pollution at it’s highest readings. Last year was a VERY high water year, so it probably diluted most of the readings on nitrogen and phosphates. This year will be more of an average year, so this year’s tests will be important to see what an average year will look like. If we get some low water years within the study time, it will provide even more info about the effects of wastewater discharge into the Spur. In low water years, the wastewater will be about the only inflow to the majority of the Spur, so the nutrient-loading will be at higher proportions-so the tests will be even more telling. The DWQ is doing some modeling to determine what the impacts will be on water quality after the Willard/Perry area hits maximum buildout. At that point, there will be LOTS of water flowing out of the sewer plant and into the Spur. They will be building a new 48″ pipeline from the plant to the Willard Bay outlet…this will provide a constant flow of water above the Spur boat ramp.

From our perspective, the DWQ is doing an a very thorough job and I have been very impressed with the professionalism of this team. Not only have they provided excellent study data, but they have also strived to keep costs low. Keep in mind that this area holds massive amounts of waterfowl in the fall, so keeping it healthy will affect most duck hunters in Northern Utah. Willard Spur and Bear River Bay are very important holding/feeding areas to migrating waterfowl. This area supplies ducks out into Harold Crane, Ogden Bay, Howard Sough, Bear River Refuge, Salt Creek, and Public Shooting Grounds. If we allow the water quality to degrade, the duck food will not be there and then we will have thousands of hunters wondering what happened to all the ducks that used to be around during the hunting season. We really need to keep feeding these birds in the Spur with high quality food and water! If anyone tells you that our Waterfowl Management areas are plenty sufficient to keep the hunting great around here–they are sadly mistaken. As Utah waterfowlers, we must strive to protect the wetlands and marshes that are left. The UWA will continue to keep a close eye out for any threats to our waterfowling heritage!

Evaporating Shorelines

I know that with Facebook and Twitter you get “causes and projects” thrown at you every day.  This is a good thing, raising awareness for global concerns and large scale issues.  It is just that we may becoming glazed over to them.  That worries me.  We all need personal projects to stand behind and fight for. Even if it just paying attention to what is happening.

This is an issue I think everyone in Utah needs to be more aware of.  Even with it happening within our state boundaries it is going to effect everyone on a world scale.  These birds do not stay in our lake.  These minerals are picked up and spread through the jet stream.  If  our lake gets sick there will be no more sea monkeys (brine shrimp) for our children to play with.  Our lake is more important then you realize.

So instead of watching Two and a Half Men tonight sit down with your family and watch this film.  Think about what it could do, talk to your kids about wetlands, let your co-workers know that this is a real issue we need to address in our lifetime.  Don’t let it become The Raped Salt Lake

Evaporating Shorelines

Gear Wish List

This is a post I will be updating as the off season goes by.  Please feel free to add things I should be looking at in the comments and give me ideas on brands.

  • I need a new set of waders.  My Cabelas waders just have too many patched holes.  I am thinking I will probably end up with something like this from Cabelas.
  • A Yeti, I don’t need one I just want one.  With that Max-4 seat.  Hells yeah
  • I am really wanting a side by side for shooting ducks.  I have my old Stevens that I use for upland but that barrel is just not up for steel shot.  This C-Z is pretty darn sweet looking.  I dont think I would take it on the GSL though.  Any other SxS out there that I should look at?
  • After lots of looking at Marsh boats I am thinking about one that didn’t even make my list at first.  I think this Four Rivers boat fits my needs pretty much to the T.

Four items is a pretty small list but they are all damn expensive.

I am Going to Have to Take Out the Extender and Put Back in the Plug

Well it has been a disappointing evening for me and my hunting buddy Jeff.  The Goose Gods let us down and we never even made it to South Dakota.

We got a call from our guide Dan Hogfoss saying that the warm weather has messed us up hard and that we should probably push our hunt off till next season.  The birds had been holding down south because of the cold weather and now that it is 75 degrees the birds are headed north and they are going by fast and staying high.  Nothing wants to stop and meet two boys from Utah.

I think it says a lot for his outfittter that he was a good enough guide to tell us that this hunt wouldn’t meet our expectations.  This was a free trip, purchased at auction, he was not going to make any money off of us.  Just a stout tip. It would have been easy for him to give us a low bird week and save the good days next year for his established clients. Dan, thank you.

We are planning on going next year for sure.  If anyone wants to come along Dan will hunt six to a field so we have room for four more.  I would love to go out for two 2.5 day hunts.  EPIC.  Nick you know have a year to plan. Think about it . . .   A week in the plains chasing snow geese.  This year I was just wanting to go out and shoot some birds.  I know have a $300 flight that they owe me.  Those white devils will pay with their blood.

I was wanting to extend my waterfowling this year, I guess I will have to wait for October with everyone else.

No snow geese for Jeff or me.

Some Perfect Gunning Blocks

I am really excited to be able to share some of the cool things I stumble across with you all.

I had a post a few weeks back on Soft Shell Decoys, today I am going with some very different decoys.  These are not light and easy,  you can not pick up five dozen of them and go for a long hike through the mud.  These decoys more about tradition and aesthetics then ease of use.  They are carved and painted blocks by Eric Flones.  Eric uses very traditional materials (cedar, sugar pine, cork, and basswood) to make gunning decoys.  Some of his blocks look more suited for the fireplace mantel then  Puget Sound. I assume it is the fact he had Dave Hagerbaumer and Tom Newell for  mentors that it has only taken five years for his birds to look so good.  Eric’s work is very clean and flowing, very nice simple patterns that just have the right shape.  Pictures will do more justice then my descriptions could.

A funny thing is I hunted over that pair of Eric’s shovelers this season before I had ever stumbled across his webpage, we had five limits that day.  His decoys could be good luck.  Check out Eric’s blog for some more photos and info on his blocks.