This year's trip was a bit different (different people, fewer dogs, slower pace of trip) and much the same (great time, same general place/area). Here are my thoughts, in no particular order:
- Not having a specific time to be anywhere on the drive out & back made for a more relaxed drive & stopping at a hotel overnight each way (Rockford, IL on the way out & Gary, IN on the way back) made the drive much easier. It also added cost & reduced available hunting time - so it was a trade-off.
- This was the first time we ever made a trip with only 1 dog, & this was a year we really needed 2 or 3. The pheasant population was higher than ever before & we just didn't have the dog power to hunt pheasants much (unless we would have exchanged it for duck hunting time). A second dog would have allowed us to hunt a couple hours daily for pheasants & we surely would have done well.
- Speaking of doing well - Moose FAR exceeded my expectations on the trip. Whether talking about general obedience in & around the hotel or working in the field - he was awesome! Having basically 0 pheasant hunting experience, we didn't know what he would do & he handed the work like he'd been doing it for years: he hunted as hard as his stamina would permit & wasn't shy about going thru the thick cover/cattails; he hunted in front of us & quartered between the guns very well; he stayed in range & checked-back often; he sat on every flush & was steady on all 3 retrieves. He was birdy multiple times, putting up several roosters for us to shoot & obviously trailing running bird scent several times.
- In the duck blind, we found that he didn't really like sitting on the retriever stand once it got wet and cold (although he did it), but he was well behaved & steady when sitting on the ground next to us. He was a little excitable, whining a little when birds would land just outside gun range - but nothing that disturbed the hunt. He retrieved all the birds we could have expected, including the long cripple into the cattails described earlier in the blog. It did take some rock throwing to complete a couple retrieves - as he's not yet been trained to do blind retrieves. That will be a task to complete before next year! We only failed to recover 2 ducks: 1 fell into cattails that were also thick with pheasant scent (he flushed 2 pheasants while looking for the downed duck) & 1 that we really didn't see go down & therefore only had a general area to have him try to search...
- With only hunting pheasants a couple evenings (& shortened time periods even on those days), it made for a lot more free time mid-day through the trip. This turned the trip into more of a 'vacation' than the intense excursion it has been in previous years. We even had time for some sightseeing one day: going to the Lewis & Clark interpretive center & visiting Fort Mandan (where L&C wintered in 1804 & met Sacagawea).
- The coyote that I hit with the car on Wednesday morning did a little damage, but nothing major. Given that was the worst thing that happened on the trip, (& the fact that Allstate will cover the damage) I'll take it!
- Duck numbers & therefore shooting opportunities were lower than our average experience in ND, but were still good. Lower early Spring water levels reduced the amount of local ducks in the area & lack of any recent weather North of us hadn't pushed the migration birds down to us yet. This considered, we still had solid opportunities every day & converted more some days than others. Local temps for the week were generally upper 30's lows & low 60's highs: slightly warmer than optimal...
- In terms of the number of birds we shot: this year was just a little below the average of the previous 8 trips for ducks shot per hour of hunting & we DOUBLED our average number of pheasants shot per hour of hunting.
- Sharing the experience with Christopher & Dad was awesome. We definitely missed Dan & I spent time every day thinking about & telling Christopher "what Uncle Dan would be doing or saying in this situation".
- Knowing that you can only stand to see so many selfies of the 3 of us (& that everyone is always happy to see pics of Christopher & Moose), here are a couple more from our trip home: in the hotel, C insisted on sleeping on the couch (not pulling it out into a sofa bed) & slept with his shoes on. Moose made himself comfortable on my bed & was very happy to have a fire hydrant to water outside the hotel. He was really happy on the final leg of the trip (after we dropped-off Dad) when C went to the back seat to do school work & he got to sleep on the front passenger seat the whole way home from Ohio!
- I spent more time this year reflecting on how thankful I am for the opportunity to take this trip & all the people in my life that make it possible. From Dad, Dan, Christopher & all our dogs that have accompanied me, to Jennifer & Lori & Mom supporting us to spend time together to do it, to AJ, Drew, & Luke being ok with giving up their Dad for a week, to friends and family that have helped in multiple ways; it wouldn't be possible without the assistance and support of all these people. To all of you: I'm thankful for you & truly blessed to have you in my life!