2thousand5.4 said:
Bluesky2012 said:
Look for small round coves cut into the corners. Here is a pic from a spot I hunted Saturday. It is about 1/4 mile off the main channel, runs about 3' deep, and tends to hold birds. It looks bigger in the pic, but is at most 100 yards across. The bottom is oyster mud and holds invertebrates ducks like to eat. Spots like this tend to yield a mixed bag of puddlers and some divers for me. I wouldn't just limit yourself to your layout boat. I often will take a low profile lawn chair, and get in the grass and hunt from behind that cover as well.
I'm gonna try to go back out there tommorow. I think I saw a spot that was kinda like that. There was a few small coves In the creek. Honestly I didn't stay out there long yesterday so I didn't get to do to much scouting. Idk if I'm gonna be able to get a chair into the grass but I'll try. I'm not sure what the bottom is like. I just shoved a stick down into the bottom at some spots to see how deep it was. To me it felt like some weeds on top of a sandy muddy bottom. What is the smallest cove you would hunt? Just from looking at the spot on Google Earth I can see a bunch of coves ranging from about 20 yards across all the way to about 100 yards.
Some grass areas you can, some you cant. You can make some ways to get in there, but also, don't be afraid to get in there, sit on your knees, and duck low when birds come in. Done that many times as well.
I don't mind hunting a cut that's a 40 yard circle. Any smaller than that, and there better be a reason to hunt it (you're seeing birds there a lot). The issue is, in a small cut, you may get washed out by the grass when the birds look down. They just won't notice you. BUT if you cannot bring in many decoys, then the same can be said for too big of an area. It just takes a few hunts to figure it out.
I do have one hole in a creek that is all flooded marsh grass. The hole is no more than 25 yards across, and it does produce birds. The big difference is, it is a small creek headed towards bigger water. Birds fly up and down the creek to enter/ leave the swamp and head into the tidal flats, so they will pass over it anyways. If you are simply out in a giant section of grass flats, I'd be afraid you would not be noticed at all if you hunted too small a hole.
It just takes practice, and I keep learning more about it each time I'm out.