Nebraskaland

Nebraskaland October 2020

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1293505

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 30 of 63

October 2020 • Nebraskaland 31 look for areas with slack water and shallow bars, what they call slicks, where the birds want to sit out of the wind." While you might fi nd some good spots right off the main channel, some of the best hunting is often well off it, Kostinec said. Getting to those spots is easier than it once was thanks to mud motors, which handle shallow water and obstacles better than conventional outboards, but it is still tricky. "You've got to fi nd ways to shoot these little chutes," Kostinec said. "Once you spend some time on the river you can fi gure out how to read the water to get back into those back chutes, and sometimes that's where the birds are hiding. "When old birds won't work a spread on a sandbar tip, you've got to go back somewhere in the middle of a sandbar or sand fl at. They just avoid spreads and they go back and look for hiding places. They're going out looking for short grass to hide in, some kind of marsh grass, bulrush, sedges or whatever else." Finding those spots in the dark can be a fruitless, not to mention dangerous, search. That's why most hunters, including Kostinec, spend plenty of time scouting during the day. After identifying areas they want to hunt, they leave a track on their GPS on the way back to the boat ramp that they can follow out to their spot in the dark the next morning and not have to second guess themselves on where those sandbars or logs are in the river. Those obstacles are known to take out lower units or steering cables and even leave hunters high and dry. "In some ways it's nice," Kostinec said, referring to the hazards of the area. "It keeps the amateurs out of this area, although I've had to pull people off of sandbars before that got rammed up on them for not knowing how to read the river." He's been there, too, and has a list of people he can call if ABOVE: Steve Wilson of Lincoln puts the finishing touches on a decoy spread as the sun rises above the Missouri River delta above Lewis and Clark Lake. LEFT: Terry Kostinec of Springfield, South Dakota, takes a drake mallard from his black lab, Blue, while hunting the delta.

Articles in this issue

view archives of Nebraskaland - Nebraskaland October 2020