Hunts / Waterfowl / Goose

Goose Hunting

Big waterfowl hunting with decoys and calling

Fall & winter migratory seasons
Steel shot required nationwide
Conservation Order for snow geese

Scouting (Most Critical)

Successful goose hunters spend more time scouting than hunting. "Six decoys in the right place are better than six dozen in the wrong location."

Scouting Strategy

  • Morning Scout: Watch where birds fly from roost to feed
  • Evening Scout: Wait until birds leave field, then enter to check
  • Mark Exact Spots: GPS coordinates or landmarks where birds fed
  • Look for Droppings: Fresh sign pinpoints feeding areas
  • Pattern Behavior: Geese are creatures of habit - same fields daily

Field Hunting

Field hunting over decoys is the primary method for Canada geese. Position in feeding areas identified through scouting.

Field Hunting Keys

  • Location: Directly under expected flight path
  • Wind: Set up so birds approach into wind (how they land)
  • Concealment: Critical - geese extremely wary under pressure
  • Plan 360° Cover: Include overhead concealment
  • Use Natural Cover: Fencelines, cattails, low spots

Water Hunting

Hunting geese over water requires less scouting than field hunting and targets roosting/resting behavior.

Water Setup Tips

  • Mix Decoys: Floaters and full-body for natural look
  • Resting Poses: Sleeper decoys create relaxed appearance
  • U-Pattern: Standard spread in front of blind
  • Add Variety: Snow goose or swan decoys upwind to center birds
  • Space Broadly: In open water, avoid tight clusters

Calling Geese

Goose calling is an art that takes practice. Short-reed calls offer the most versatility but have a steeper learning curve than flute calls.

Calling Tips

  • Short-Reed: 23 vocalizations possible - most versatile choice
  • Flute Calls: Easier to learn, sufficient for most situations
  • Back of Tongue: Controls airflow for deeper goose sounds
  • Read the Birds: Adjust intensity based on their response
  • Less is More: Overcalling flares educated geese

Decoy Spreads

Spread Size by Season

  • Early Season: 3-5 dozen minimum
  • Regular Season: 6-8 dozen for visibility
  • Late Season: 100+ for large feeds OR 1-2 dozen to look different
  • Key Principle: Quality placement over quantity

Spread Patterns

  • U or J Pattern: Most common, creates landing zone
  • Family Groups: 4-10 decoys per group, 10 yards apart
  • Feeder Decoys: Place where you want birds to land
  • Leave Landing Area: Geese avoid flying over decoys
  • Spacing: 5-6 feet between individual decoys

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