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Post Info TOPIC: layout blind crow hunting


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layout blind crow hunting
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Have any of you tried to use a waterfowl layout blind to set up out in the centers of chopped corn fields and lay still with your calls in hand and shotgun at your hip... to your decoy spreads of commen crows?

 

As I have a Tan colored layout blind and felt it may be more of a challenge to blend in and such ,but then they wouldn't feel a person with a shotgun was layin' in wait for them over a chopped flat corn field.....

 

Scottie_The_Boy



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Oh They will feel you alright!!! Since you have one go ahead and git ye some of itno I would not buy one for bandits tho!!! I've been there done that and bought that T-shirt. Far as Im concerned you just as well kneel down or just stand there... They dont like em, They see em, And you can't see them. It ain't like waterfowl huntin where you can predict a flight pattern, Watch what happens when you pop up out of that thing to shootno Bandits will laugh their ass off at ya!!! All you can do is cuss and reload,,,,Thats just my opinion of themhmm



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Chip,Okay..felt I best ask....wasn't to sure..... I do use it for waterfowl,September early season goose hunting for sure in chopped corn with our goose decoy spread and some crows circle i have seen,yet never came in close to our spread and blinds....


So It will save extra to cart along... Maybe room for 6 more hard plastic crow decoys then... or other gear ... Thanks


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Scottie,

When a goose hears the report of a gun, whether they see you or not, they are gone. So save the layout for the geese. The whole idea with crow hunting is keeping the birds there while you are shooting. The second you fling open the doors of a layout blind your done. Stay hiden in a stand up blind or be still in the woods or tree line. Keep your movement to a minimum even while shooting. Full camo, head to toe.

Goose opens for NJ tommorow. Crow is open on Thurdays also.biggrin  A buddy of mine just backed out of the hunt last night due to power just returning. North Jersey rivers will still be over flood stage for days.

Mike



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Mike, is right on!!smile



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I disagree with these guys. I posted that I use a layout on here about 2 years ago. Several guys on this forum slamed me for even mentioning it.

Fact is, where I live and hunt, a layout blind works well for crows. Several places where I hunt for crows, they simply will not come in to a call because they get called by MANY different hunters and they're too used to it. However, If we setup in the middle of a cut cornfield in our layout blinds with decoys around us, no calls at all, they fly in just a couple at a time. We pop up and kill them. They might see us before we shoot, but we pop up when they're 10 yds or closer. So, they might be laughing at us, but they die laughing.

Kev


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I have always had a hard time shooting well out of a layout situation, be it crows, waterfowl or whatever. IMO very hard to use proper shooting technique in a sitting or "fowlers" position. Find myself doing too much point and shoot or "snap shooting" once birds are up and over past the kill zone.

Much prefer to shoot in the standing position. I hunt crows often in very open country. Finding a bit of cover is almost always possible even in the most open terrain. Have even used a vehicle for cover on occation and shot good strings of crows before they got smart.

Photo below depicts this where where a dozen birds were shot in short order while crouching behind my vehicle. This was very open country which was basically open prairie. Ecaller placed right on the roof...if ya can believe that!smile

Ted



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I've never tried it but I recall a young fella that used to post on the old forum...I think he was from Minnesota and went by the handle "Old Crow" ...used layout blinds with good success even having shoots over 100 birds.

I'm in general agreement with the comments here and if I had a choice I'd choose to a blind where I could stand but just because it doesn't work for one guy doesn't mean it won't work for another.

I guess it would depend on the situation and the local crows but if you think it might work I'd say give it a try, there are a couple of guys here that it has worked for.   What's the worst that can happen...you end up lugging a bunch of gear out and not getting a lot of crows...I've done that lots of times trying different things...it's all part of the game.

Good Luck and let us know if you give it a try

HH



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From what I gather here is that these birds from way up north are less educated, than they are when they get this far south. I bet you Maine, if you came down here and hunted with your lay out blind you would throw it in the ditch after a couple hours. By the same token I might bring mine up there with you boys and love it. I can shoot from any position and enjoy a layout blind for waterfowl. I'm so arthritic now I have to have help gettin up after I've been in it for an hour.LOL..... Moral to the story,,,,,,,Different strokes for different folks.......Different part of the country,,,,Same crows Different attitudes,,, as well as degrees in educationbiggrin    



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I hunt all over the country for crows and can tell you it is way eaisier down south to pile up crows then north.

 

JH



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HMMM ? Kind of looks like this . ( Jon's in the blind )

 

I would say that it worked pretty good for us. We had birds coming really low. Like under 12' low. We did run into some set up problems. First time trying it and we need to work out the bugs. But given the right set-up, they work pretty good. 

Over all though they have the up's and down's. You really would have to pick and choose the stands as to where and when to use them. 



-- Edited by Puppypopper on Thursday 1st of September 2011 02:37:59 AM

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chip wrote:

From what I gather here is that these birds from way up north are less educated, than they are when they get this far south. I bet you Maine, if you came down here and hunted with your lay out blind you would throw it in the ditch after a couple hours. By the same token I might bring mine up there with you boys and love it. I can shoot from any position and enjoy a layout blind for waterfowl. I'm so arthritic now I have to have help gettin up after I've been in it for an hour.LOL..... Moral to the story,,,,,,,Different strokes for different folks.......Different part of the country,,,,Same crows Different attitudes,,, as well as degrees in educationbiggrin    


Bingo! Up here in Canada during the summer and fall I have shot crow while wearing a white shirt and shortsbiggrin. Most are young and have never been shot at before. They get educated real fast though. Our spring crows on the other hand are very wary. They have been shot at by guys in the Midwest all winter and when  migrating up here are very tough to foolevileye.

 

Ted



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Hello Puppy,

Here are a few photos of some of my setups under similar circumstances as yours.

Bob A.



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M12shooter,

Is that a JC Higgins By any Chance in your Pic to the Left of your Post... as I have a 12 gauge Model 20 that looks Exactly the same.. yet it's not a 16 like that one,yet a 12 gauge....


I Have a few hedge rows i can sit in Friday Morning ...also a Pile of them large round bales near a silage bunker.....


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Scottie,

You just hurled the worst insult imaginable to M 12 Shooter calling his prized Model 12 Winchester a JC Higgins LOL.

Bob A.

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Bob,gotta make good friends some how..he he...I should of Known a JC Higgins has nothing to hold up to for upland game birds or lasting a few seasons he he... Mine is a gun cabinet dust collector as I never shot it or took it out to show a neighbor even.. lmao..

Sorry Shooter,Can we still be friends.. ..

All in good humor M 12....

Atless i didn't think it was a Mossburg.... DUCKING.....


Scottie_The_Boy



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Them lay downs blinds look great for takin a nap in when the goose huntin gets slow!!smile



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Shane, its the first and I'm going today !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I'll post some pics tonight.

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HappyHunter,

Good memory. I also remember those fellas from MN that posted pics of several hunts where layout blinds were used. They did use, however, powerhunters that are a little more forgiving in the movement-upon-shooting situation. They have lids that you can slowly creep from underneath VS flipping the doors open to expose your location like in most other types of layout blinds.

I have a couple layout blinds but have yet to use them for crow hunting. I guess it is because crows are easier to decoy near the edges of fields VS waterfowl that generally prefer the middle where there is no cover. I have brought my layout blind along several times on hunts but always left it in the truck because I always found a set up were I was able to call the crows over to some sort of cover.

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Puppypopper wrote:

Shane, its the first and I'm going today !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I'll post some pics tonight.


 phone broke?



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Nope.  You're just too ugly.

 

jonthepain.jpg

 

biggrinbiggrinbiggrin

 

 

Just bust'n your chops of course!

 

biggrin



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Hey Pup, early goose starts Sept 6 here,I am going with My pal Brian and My Dad,we all are sporten new laydown blinds that we got cheap at the end of the season from Cabelas,clearance sale. We can shoot seven each in the early season.I have been so busy at work trying to keep the buisness going I have not had time to scout.no



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You gonna shoot them honkers with that 20 guage Shanedog!!!! And make it sporting likebiggrin Or you gonna meat hog em with a 12no Whatever you do don't shoot your dads swing..  LOL!!!!!!



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Bob the first pic of your layout blind looks real good,,,,, You sure you didn't have Shane come up er and camo that thing for yabiggrin



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oh snap!

you win.

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chip wrote:

From what I gather here is that these birds from way up north are less educated, than they are when they get this far south. I bet you Maine, if you came down here and hunted with your lay out blind you would throw it in the ditch after a couple hours. By the same token I might bring mine up there with you boys and love it. I can shoot from any position and enjoy a layout blind for waterfowl. I'm so arthritic now I have to have help gettin up after I've been in it for an hour.LOL..... Moral to the story,,,,,,,Different strokes for different folks.......Different part of the country,,,,Same crows Different attitudes,,, as well as degrees in educationbiggrin    


 Agreed



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Scottie_The_Boy wrote:

M12shooter,

Is that a JC Higgins By any Chance in your Pic to the Left of your Post... as I have a 12 gauge Model 20 that looks Exactly the same.. yet it's not a 16 like that one,yet a 12 gauge....


I Have a few hedge rows i can sit in Friday Morning ...also a Pile of them large round bales near a silage bunker.....


Scottie_The_Boy


 

Scottie, the shotgun depicted by my avatar is most certainly an M12 Winchester chambered in 16 gauge... which happens to be one of my favorite gauges for upland stuff. It is one of a half dozen "daily shooters" 12's I own. Also have several classic M 12's that rarely see the light of day short of the trap range and/or special occationsbiggrin

Have to agree with you though, the Higgins M20 does appear to share common reciever lines likely copied from the Winchester.

Take your JC Higgins out and drop a few crows with it. Don't worry about what others thinksmile

Ted



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Hi Chip,

Perhaps we need to have Shane on the payroll so he can keep my blinds brushed up real well.

I just picked up 2,500 rounds at Walmart, I could hardly push the damn cart! No food, just ammo. The guy in back of me said, man you must have some dove spot? I said, not really, I'm just a very poor shot and "where there is lead in the air there is hope!"

Talk with ya soon Chip.

Bob A.

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Bob wrote:

Hi Chip,

Perhaps we need to have Shane on the payroll so he can keep my blinds brushed up real well.

I just picked up 2,500 rounds at Walmart, I could hardly push the damn cart! No food, just ammo. The guy in back of me said, man you must have some dove spot? I said, not really, I'm just a very poor shot and "where there is lead in the air there is hope!"

Talk with ya soon Chip.

Bob A.


 Your going to have to beef up the suspension on your half ton there as well Bobsmile

 

Ted



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Bob you truly are slicker than a hounds nut without a shadow of a doubt,,,,Please tell me they weren't Federalsno



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Hello Chip,

I get either the Federal or Remington load (El Cheapo Loads) at Walmart. As long as it's the 3 dram load it does a fine job for me.

Bob A.

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Jon, just did not want to waste your time. To some degree that was all it was.

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Hi Ted,

Jerry Byroade used to say "Bob, now I know why you trade trucks every two years" mainly highway miles. I average 18,000 miles a season hunting crows.

I keep most of the ammo in the bed of the truck right behind the drivers seat.

Bob A.



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