Ramsey Russell

Jeff and Andy are joined by die hard waterfowl hunter, Ramsey Russell from getducks.com. The guys look at Ramsey’s travels from the previous waterfowl season and discuss how Covid impacted his time on the road, what is leading to the changes in duck behavior, and where his all time favorite destination is to hunt ducks.
Andy Shaver: Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, welcome to The Big Honker podcast.
Jeff Stanfield: What about kids of all ages?
Andy Shaver: I don’t know if it’s appropriate that they’re listening to our show.
Jeff Stanfield: Do you let your son, my grandson oldest one will listen to it?
Andy Shaver: No way.
Jeff Stanfield: It’s probably a pretty good deal.
Andy Shaver: But I mean, honestly I don’t know.
Jeff Stanfield: He’s pretty level headed though.
Andy Shaver: He’s probably heard most of it out here.
Jeff Stanfield: Yeah, this is not really a good place to raise kids, look how you all turned out. Next thing you know you wake up he’ll be in the hunting business.
Andy Shaver: Oh God I hope not. Check us out, we’re up on YouTube now, all episodes. All new episodes are going up to YouTube, we Skype our guests, it all goes up to the YouTube machines, so if you’re bored check us out on YouTube. Big Honker podcast, pretty easy to find. This podcast is brought to you by the one and only Stanfield Hunting Outfitters. Got a couple of turkey hunts left –
Jeff Stanfield: We got a couple turkey hunts left. I got one dove hunt, private dove hunt weekend left for 20 or more and that’s about it. And I’ve got some October hunts and some November hunts all because two fat boys had a dream.
Andy Shaver: A little bit of here and there. So, call Jeff 940-658-3172 if you think you want to come out –
Jeff Stanfield: And I do answer my own phone, unlike the world famous Andy Shaver. Just old fucking Jeff answers his phone.
Andy Shaver: Got to. We’re also brought to you by blind grass. Listen, they’re not just a company that sells synthetic grass for your blind, but they do sell synthetic grass for your blind and it works great. You brush it once you forget about it, it’s not going to rot or mildew. They also have waterproof gun cases and waterproof shell bags. If you’re somebody that hunts water, listen, we’re water fowlers or if you’re hunting flooded timber and you’re worried about your shotgun shells taking a dive –
Jeff Stanfield: Or you’re on a boat all summer fishing. If you’ve got a boat get one of their dry bags, put your stuff in it, seal it up in that bag and leave it in your boat and you don’t have to worry. Because trust me, when that something happens to that boat and you wish you had a dry bag, it’s too late.
Andy Shaver: Beautiful blindgrass.com. Also, we are brought to you by bang tail whiskey, @bangtailcom.
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Andy Shaver: Yeah, they’ll ship it right to you, right?
Jeff Stanfield: They ship it anywhere in the United States now. Buy it online, shipped to your door make an old fashioned.
Andy Shaver: Whiskey sour Jeff. That’s what all the proper gentlemen are drinking are whiskey sour.
Jeff Stanfield: Excuse me, I’m not proper like someone of the other gentlemen.
Andy Shaver: People, that’s the first thing they think of. Check them out at bangtail.com. It is good whiskey. We had it out here this last winter. Really good stuff. We’re also brought to you by Goose Creek retriever. Mr. Matt Peel, it is the dog training season. If you’re going to have your four legged buddy ready to go by September, October November, you need to get on the horse right now and Matt Peel can help you out.
Jeff Stanfield: At goosecreekretrievers.com. They have an early exposure puppy program 10 weeks to 5 months old. If you’re going to spend the money to buy a dog to train, there’s no sense. And I’ve seen so many people that they buy the puppy and sits in their Kennel till 6 months old. They sit at the house, your kids ruined the dog basically by spoiling it and then you got to start all over. Send it off to somewhere like Matt, have them take that puppy from 10 weeks on and get it started and ready. They’re going to exposure to live birds, dead birds, water, gunfire, obedience and potty training, and potty training is a key. You buy a dog, you send your puppy off and the son of a bitch, don’t shit in the house. So, I’m telling you right now, goosecreekretrievers.com. Our buddy Matt Peel and get the early exposure puppy program and tell him just plain old Jeff told you to give him a call.
Andy Shaver: Because plain old Jeff will be sending his dog to Goose Creek retrievers.
Jeff Stanfield: I am not trying to potty train.
Andy Shaver: And if you’ve got that four legged friend, then you’re going to need stuff to go around it. You need to go to gundogsoutdoors.com and get their stuff that’s going to help you make life a little bit better around the house for your four legged hunting buddy. They’ve got the field trauma kit, which I think everybody needs whether you got a dog or not. They’ve got this nifty little water gadget, you press a button, water comes out into the little mouth guard dog drinks it that way. No more cramming water bottles down your dog’s throat. It’s easy and effective. And also they’ve got what I think is the best products since sliced bread. The quick release system. It is now patented. All it takes is one accident, all it takes is one dog break and it’s a completely different morning. Get the quick release system, keep your four legged hunting buddy right next to you where he should be. We’re also brought to you by Pacific calls. The boys up at the Pacific calls have hell of a thing going on. They’re retooling the 206, I’ve had the pleasure of running it. It is an absolute screamer. It’s also turkey season they’ve got mouth calls, they’ve got some pot calls. You can check them out @pacificcustomcalls.com. And if you use the promo code BHP 25 it saves you 25% off, check out.
Jeff Stanfield: They’re going to be at Squad Fest and they’re going to be at the Ducks Unlimited at Texas motor speedway in June and then they’ll be at the Game Fair in Minnesota.
Andy Shaver: They better get to going. They better get to building.
Jeff Stanfield: And the world famous Andy Shaver is going to be at Squad Fest and they’ll come Minnesota.
Andy Shaver: We’re still negotiating but we’ll see.
Jeff Stanfield: You’re negotiating on what?
Andy Shaver: We’re negotiating Jeff.
Jeff Stanfield: Who’s we?
Andy Shaver: It was a joke. You obviously didn’t get it.
Jeff Stanfield: I guess not.
Andy Shaver: Check them out pacificcustomcalls.com. Speaking of squad festival, we’re bought to you by –
Jeff Stanfield: You’re negotiating on rights of having to sign autographs all day. Excuse us.
Andy Shaver: I’m not signing autographs all day.
Jeff Stanfield: But you will, if someone asks you?
Andy Shaver: We’ll see. Once again we’re negotiating. We’re brought to you by Dive Bomb Industries. The leader skinny is the way to go. We packed everything up just a couple months ago, everything stored away so nicely. It’s insane. You need to be running silhouettes, the full body movement is over, and it’s done with. Divebombindustries.com. it’s a way of life. You get skinning, you put out big spreads, you pack them up nice and neat and you move on about your day.
Jeff Stanfield: Organize and life is simple.
Andy Shaver: I love it. They’ve also got some new floaters coming out, be looking for – they’ve got the duck floater out already, but they’ve also got Canada goose floater coming out in the near future. So, be looking for that over @divebombindustries.com. Love them. Also we’re brought to you by Dirty Duck Coffee. If your coffee sucks, it ain’t the duck Texas made, it’s how I start my morning, every morning with the high velocity. Fill that cup up and way I go to my go go juice.
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Andy Shaver: Am I going to get one, Jeff? Or am I going to have to beg?
Jeff Stanfield: They got our sizes. They got a badass shirt coming that I don’t think they’ve got up on the site, but I’ve seen it and it’s awesome.
Andy Shaver: Seeing chef says I’m world famous but he’s getting insider information. But do check them out @dirtyduck.com and get your high velocity or they’ve got a bunch of different blends. So, check them out, whichever one fits your personality buy it. Dirty Duck Coffee. Also brought to you by Boss Shot Shells American made bismuth, copper plated, all it takes is one. They’re also running their boss tom line right now. I am very much looking forward to smacking a tom turkey in the face with boss tom.
Jeff Stanfield: You still giving everybody one boss time to shoot the turkey with this year’s or is that last year’s?
Andy Shaver: It was last year, Jeff.
Jeff Stanfield: Okay.
Andy Shaver: CORONA screwed that for everybody. Now, we’ll see but no, that was last year. You’re screwed. Check them out @bossshotshells.com. It’s never too early to get your shotgun shells for this coming season.
Jeff Stanfield: Highly recommend getting your shells – get them ordered in before summer time.
Andy Shaver: Do not wait until the last minute, that’s what we’re trying to say.
Jeff Stanfield: Last year end the year I had guys calling me every day that we’re coming on there next week and were having trouble finding shells. Don’t get stuck in that situation, start stocking up now. Buy a case now, buy another case in May, buy a case in July and you’re done for the year.
Andy Shaver: Bossshotshells.com. We’re also brought to you by Lucky Duck. It is predator hunting season, there are tournaments all over. They have a wonderful electronic predator call, make all sorts of noises with it. Clay Reed would approve.
Jeff Stanfield: Best blinds on the market?
Andy Shaver: Best blinds on the market. Best spinners on the market bar none. You can fit four grown men in the blind and –
Jeff Stanfield: Don’t forget about your buddy that rides in the back of the truck and get you a dog crate.
Andy Shaver: Yeah, that’s exactly right. They’ve got a dog crate out there. That is five star crash test rated or whatever they stick with it, so don’t worry about sticking Fido in the back of the pickup because if he blows out he’ll be okay or if hit a patch of ice, he’ll be all right back there. You? Maybe not too much but dog will make it. Check them out @luckyduck.com. Last but not least RIP Rest in paradise Looking Glass Duck Club podcast.
Jeff Stanfield: Might be coming back soon. I might have some information.
Andy Shaver: You’re terrible to these people.
Jeff Stanfield: Anyways, check them out at the Looking Glass Duck Club-
Andy Shaver: They still have – you can still support them. They have apparel you can check him out on Instagram and message Logan. He really likes penis pictures. If you send him a penis picture, you get like a freak Uzi or something like that. So he loves to see it, check him out at Looking Glass Duck Club on Instagram and enjoy. We appreciate everybody listening and check us out on YouTube, subscribe if you haven’t already, that’s what everybody on YouTube has to say like and subscribe. All right. This episode of the podcast, we’re joined by the one and only Mr. Ramsey Russell. He is a world traveler, even during COVID times didn’t really put a damper on his style. He still traveled plenty, still pulled the trigger a lot. He’s a very interesting man. And we had a great conversation with him so we hope that you enjoy it. He’s also got a podcast out called it’s Duck Season Somewhere. You can check him out wherever you’re listening to this one. Here he is, Ramsey Russell.
Jeff Stanfield: Welcome to The Big Honker podcast brought to you by Bangtail Whiskey. I’m Jeff Stanfield.
Andy Shaver: I am Andy Shaver and we have got the one and only the world traveler, even in COVID times Mr. Ramsey Russell. How are you, Ramsey?
Ramsey Russell: I’m good man. Double R, Ramsey Russell.
Andy Shaver: That’s it?
Ramsey Russell: I’m in Mississippi right now.
Andy Shaver: Well, I don’t imagine it’s as pretty as where you were last week, weren’t you? You’re in Mexico last week, weren’t you? Or was that two weeks ago?
Ramsey Russell: I was. It’s been a couple of weeks, yeah I was in Mexico a couple of weeks ago and I miss it. I love Mexico. I love it. I love Western Mexico I should say. And Eastern Mexico. I don’t care much for Central Mexico but I like the ends.
Andy Shaver: Now, how was it traveling this year with COVID with everything that we’ve gone through, how was it compared to normal years?
“Man, I’m glad you asked that because I ain’t going to lie to you man, since COVID stuck a big old stick in everybody’s gears, there have been no international travel. And look I’ll back up and say this, I got home on February 22nd or 23rd of 2020 from Azerbaijan and was going to be home for two straight months, 60 days.”
Ramsey Russell: Man, I’m glad you asked that because I ain’t going to lie to you man, since COVID stuck a big old stick in everybody’s gears, there have been no international travel. And look I’ll back up and say this, I got home on February 22nd or 23rd of 2020 from Azerbaijan and was going to be home for two straight months, 60 days. And that would have been the longest consecutive stretch of time I’ve been home in 5 or 6 years. My old lady Anita and I we went down to Dallas, my wife, I should say because she’s nearby. We went down to Dallas and saw the Eagles and man, what a great concert and a great time. And I’ll never forget all guys are of my age, sitting up in there, it’s all couples and we were all – contracts have changed a lot since I had hair and went to them regularly. You don’t smoke nothing in a concert now, but you buy liquor and man, what a great time that turned out to be. And Eagles put on just a heck of a show, man, what a heck of a show. But I never will forget, we’re all up talking to all the folks around, there’s no way they don’t cough on me unless you take a swig of that vodka, I don’t want no COVID and never dreamed in a million years what’s fixing to come down the pipe. But anyway, I traveled a lot in the States this year and when I went to Mexico, I have to admit, I was a little nervous because it’s a foreign country and I love Mexico but it doesn’t have $12.5 trillion dollar economy. It’s not America, it’s not the greatest country in the world in that respect. And having to wear a mask and everybody in the airport wearing a mask. And it’s so weird flying because you got a social distance and all this kind of mess and the restaurants and anywhere to eat inside an airport are closed, but then you’re packed like sardines on the plane or packed like sardines, neck and neck in the waiting room or whatever. And the minute I stepped out of that Mazatlán airport into the sunshine and took my mask off, it started feeling normal. And by the time we got to the resort and I was halfway through my first margarita, I had just about forgotten all about COVID and the most shocking thing Jeff, is having been to California and Michigan and a lot of these blue states that are handling COVID in a ridiculous way I think shut it down and trying to crash the economy. I show up Mexico and everything is open. And some of the airports you walk through down there, you kind of go through this little mister when you’re coming through customs, they stopped and they take your temperature and when you come into the hotel they take your temperature and some smiling face, put some hand sanitizer out, you step on this little doormat that cleaned your shoes and they check your temperature and you walk inside and you look right to go, nobody’s got the flu and everybody’s got clean hands and clean shoes and no cooties and because you have to take that COVID test to come back in the States a few days later by the day, two or three, you’re sitting out there in the field and I know you son of the bitches ain’t got COVID because I don’t either. But why is it our country doing just basic little safety protocols? Why are we doing that? But I felt so safe and so normal and I really felt normal when I stepped out on the water bank started shooting ducks like that, unpressured ducks. It felt so normal, it felt good. And then a few weeks later going down to Obregon for a couple of weeks stretch, same thing. It just cleans the whistle and of course the staff wore masks and stuff like that. But we’re spending most of our days out in the field or outside, so we don’t need a mask. It’s just awesome. And I’ll say this, once I got back in late January, our phone blew up. It melted with people wanted to go to Mexico. And I mean right now, like I want to go next week, you got to pay the bills and we sold the joints out for the remainder of the season. And so hundreds upon hundreds of people went to three different destinations down in Mexico, not one person came back with COVID and not one person got stuck. Everybody just went and had a great time and believe it or not, 2022 is nearly completely sold out, sold out one destination nearly in another and in 2023 is filling up quick because look, people are ready to get the hell out and go have fun again.
“I had a message today from a guy that hunts in Nebraska and me and you were on the same forum yesterday. He said, since they started shooting them in the fields all the time and the flooded corn, those ducks don’t leave water off that river until 15 minutes before dark. What’s your thoughts on this?”
Jeff Stanfield: People are tired of it. I noticed that in alternating season. Let’s about facing out to America because one of the big debates right now and we’ve get caught up in this every other year is the flooded corn. Now flooded corn, some people are saying making the ducks go nocturnal. Now, I had a message today from a guy that hunts in Nebraska and me and you were on the same forum yesterday. I don’t remember where we were at. I don’t know if it was on my page. Dive Bomb’s page or his page, but someone brought up the duck hunt. I think it might have been ours. And I said, something to the guy today messaged me and he said Jeff, I’ve hunted on the Platte River for 20 years, he said, about 10 to 15 years ago people started field hunting and he said before that you didn’t see very many people field hunting ducks. And he said, since they’ve started field hunting ducks, those ducks used to stay on the water and they would go out and feed in the fields, come back in the river and people shoot at them. He said, since they started shooting them in the fields all the time and the flooded corn, those ducks don’t leave water off that river until 15 minutes before dark. What’s your thoughts on this?
Ramsey Russell: Well, is it field hunting or is it corn fields or is it something else?
Jeff Stanfield: No, they’re hunting cornfields.
Ramsey Russell: Well, I’m making a point right here because I hear cornfields being beat up, we need to quit doing cornfield and I disagree, it’s just one man’s opinion. And I’ll tell you why? Or now, 20 years ago we didn’t hunt cornfield now we’re hunting dry fields, maybe that’s it. But I think it all boils down to the same thing and I believe that okay, I’m going to take – listen to Cho’s the other day on you all’s podcast and you were talking about corn fields and talking about those birds flying in a cornfield and holing up till pitch black dark and then flying out – coming back five minutes before shooting time. So is it corn fields? I don’t think so, Jeff. And I believe if you got rid of corn and put standing coffee weed out in there, it’ll be the same thing. But consider this for example, how big is that cornfield, 40 acres? That’s a quarter mile. This quarter mile by quarter mile. Is that 640 acres of a section? Well, that’s a mile by mile and I’ve got a blind out there. How far am I shooting? If I’m shooting 40 yards on average of 40 yard radius, well, I’m dumb forester but I can do the math of the area of a circle. I’m covering an acre out of 40 or acre out of 640 acres. And if you’ve ever hunted cornfields and I have, those ducks land all which a way to land anywhere they want to and they’re safe and may I’m sure that maybe there eating that corn if they can access it but they’re safe. And there’s a thermal barrier, there’s a habitat value but really its safe. And here’s what to tell you this story. And I’m dumb as a brick. I’m Forest and Wildlife biologist and I don’t know how I got out of school because they’re technical fields and I don’t really do math. Statistics and math. Statistics, I understood, math I don’t understand. But I never ever will forget, here’s what I’m getting at long answer but here’s what I’m getting at, about cornfields about hunting fields. I’m very adamant about what I believe the problem is in America and I’m going to use this example, I’m going to use the store from way back in college. I had this wildlife professor and he was a biometrician of epic proportion, like a lot of the real PhD biologist are man, they know statistic man. And I never forget this work problem we had to do, he was talking about cause and effect regression analysis and we had to go home and run through this problem, he gave us, but it kind of went like this, at Baptist churches increase in a community murders increase and the numbers don’t lie.
Andy Shaver: That’s true?
“Now look at what we got 1000 horsepower lift kits and tracks and it would go anywhere. Jeff, we got too goddamn much pressure on these ducks in America and I go down to Mexico, I go down to Mazatlán and the magic is not Mexico, the magic is – Man, one of the coolest mornings we had this year because it was dry in Mazatlán, it was dry.”
Ramsey Russell: So what should we do, Jeff? Should we go out and do away with all the 1st Baptist Churches in America? But if you went did math what you realize is, there was all kinds of data on that problem he gave us, it was churches and that’s kind of where he left it when we left the classroom was, the more churches there are, the higher the murder is. Well then you started noticing on the data, the more telephone poles you have and then you started noticing the bigger the population and the answer he was looking for was there’s population density increases, murders increase. Well the more people you got, the more churches you got, get it? And so it can be misleading and I understand that we see these ducks flying into cornfields and staying the day because they’re safe, they’re out of the wind, they’re out of the sunshine, they’ve got a thermal barrier, they’ve got a food source and most importantly, in a 40 acre field, a quarter mile by quarter mile, I’m not covering but an acre of it with my shotgun. Unless I’m that Ryan Bassham guy, now he’s covering two acres but I’m covering an acre. And my point being is 20 years ago, not only were we maybe not dry field hunting we weren’t riding these loud ATVs and these loud surface motors, there were vast tracts of property that we couldn’t access and didn’t access. My God, I was smiling like a kid that just won the World Series Little League baseball game and I got a one 85, 3 wheeler back in the day and that was a big dog. Now look at what we got 1000 horsepower lift kits and tracks and it would go anywhere. Jeff, we got too goddamn much pressure on these ducks in America and I go down to Mexico, I go down to Mazatlán and the magic is not Mexico, the magic is – Man, one of the coolest mornings we had this year because it was dry in Mazatlán, it was dry. So, we went to this area we call the moon in a normal wet year. It’s a massive ankle deep mud flats, soupy mud as far as you can see in his little freshwater channel comes into and we walk about 100 yards through supping mud about ankle deep, get in blind and 8 of us shoot 160 ducks, we’re done. This year, all that was gone, the moonscape was gone. We were down to the little feeder creek and I shit you not, it was 20ft wide, I stepped it off, it was 20ft wide. Not 20 yards, 20ft and it was 200 yards long. We’re talking to surface acre of water along this, for lack of a better word ditch. We’re talking surface acres of a quarter acre and me and Mr. Ian got in one blind 50 yards down the bank, husband wife team gotten another in an hour and a half we shot 80 ducks, 20 a piece quick as you could boom, done. And that hole did not get shot again for 7 or 8 days at all, Jeff. It’s like you were talking about this the other day, how many outfitters do you have within 50 or 100 miles of you?
Jeff Stanfield: We don’t have a lot here, but if you get 100 miles –
Ramsey Russell: But if you go down to Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, all part of Texas.
“There’s tons. Especially the Lubbock area alone has probably 30 outfitters that are running out of Lubbock from mom and pop deal to somebody that runs two, three groups a day. But I would bet around Lubbock within 50 miles of Lubbock, you could probably find 30 groups of hunters every day.”
Jeff Stanfield: There’s tons. Especially the Lubbock area alone has probably 30 outfitters that are running out of Lubbock from mom and pop deal to somebody that runs two, three groups a day. But I would bet around Lubbock within 50 miles of Lubbock, you could probably find 30 groups of hunters every day.
Ramsey Russell: All right, hold this thought. I was working for US Fish and Wildlife service right out of college before I found religion. And all I wanted to do in high school and college was wear a brown uniform make the world a better place. Federal government was not my calling. But I worked in refuges and I did love it for three years. And I never will forget, we had a biologist who was a shorebird guy and he was piling off as much waterfowl responsibility onto the forester me as he could because I love duck. I flew aerial surveys and did a lot of stuff when I could, but he come in there and knocked on my door one day and he says, Ducks Unlimited biologists had called him and on the north end of one of our sanctuaries our refuge on north end of one of our refuges was inviolate sanctuary and in their roosting every night were three radio collard hens. And that was back in the late 90’s and I would have thought with all the beans and rice and flooded ag and moist soil in Bolivar County, Mississippi. I would have thought that those ducks were coming off at roost and were going to be killed within three or four or five miles, doesn’t make sense. Three or four or five miles, they’re going to hit one of these fields and I hunted those areas I never saw them. Well, 11 miles the west of that sanctuary was the Mississippi River. Across the Mississippi River was right where the white river dumped into the Mississippi River and everyone of that cohort died in a rice field in Stuttgart, Arkansas 45 miles away. And that changed everything I thought about a wild duck. Those ducks were roosting in a sanctuary and flying 45 miles to feed over how much habitat? It didn’t matter they were going where they wanted to go or they were going where they were had a filo tendency to go they were imprinted to go. And that just changed everything I thought. So, now get up there in the Texas, panhandle or one of the parts of the country you’re talking about, where you’ve got all these outfitters spread out at 50 60 70 miles, man, they’re hunting the same freaking birds over and over let alone the mom and pops and everybody else is just out there hunting it’s too much pressure. I believe on these ducks. Yeah, I believe and I don’t know what the answer is. My God, I’m hunting a bunch. I want everybody to hunt a bunch and I think we need more hunters. But interestingly enough, the more you get outside your backyard, the more you see right about the time you think you’ve seen it done at all, you see something else. When you go out there to the state of Utah, nearly every single club in the Bear River Valley and on the south end, they’re on the north end, and on the south end, all those clubs around Great Salt Lake, nearly every single one of them only shoot a few days but all of them have a sanctuary. All of the state properties have a sanctuary. All of the federal properties have a sanctuary. And then when you get on the Great Salt Lake itself and those green wings and golden eyes and shovelers are out there feeding in the salt water on brine larvae and brine larvae eggs, brine shrimp egg and brine shrimp larvae, it’s just miles upon miles upon miles of sheet water that you can hunt here and they can go land 200, 300, 500 yards away a mile away and nobody is disturbing them, they’ve got somewhere to go. And I just argue my thoughts and hey, you just one man’s opinion. My thoughts are the reason we’re seeing those birds use that corn is not because of corn, it’s because of hunting pressure adjacent to it. And the truth minder is, I hear these guys saying, well, we need to open up all the refuge’s screw you. Man, a duck has got to have somewhere to go. 20 years ago at alastain down in LSU was showing where the pin tail and the blue bills and other ducks were rafting 30 miles offshore of Louisiana, just to find somewhere they weren’t disturbed. I know the numbers, the data of the hunting, data shows that hunter numbers are going down, but by the same token, the amount of hunt able area is being distilled into a much smaller amount of area. And 2, 3 years ago over in Northeast Louisiana can’t remember the name of that parish right now, over 65 pit blinds had been pulled out. Well, that’s 65 fewer places to hunt. Those farmers are now – they can make $150-$200 more dollars by not putting water on their site, by not letting, soil compaction occur with the water on it. Not wait until till spring to start disking and chisel plow on our soil and getting that hard pin out. Hey, I can disk it up right now, Go to market and see my crop in sooner and make $150,000, so who cares about this, $20,000, $30,000, $40,000 cash I’m making off of duck hunters I can make three or four times that by farming better. And as less and less habitat and the quality of habitat Jeff. Back 20-30 years ago, look at the rice crops we had. There wasn’t clear field rice, there wasn’t roundup ready, rice, there wasn’t 3rd and 4th generation soybeans that in 20 or 30 days with a little soil moisture rot. And it offers no nutrient value. And for that matter go, just look up on the Arkansas prairie, there weren’t hundreds of thousands of snow geese hitting the rice fields and getting what little rice is left over with the modern day combining practices. I think it’s a habitat quality, a habitat abundance and a hunting pressure quotient that’s going into some of the problems we’re experiencing in waterfowl, not just in the Deep South but nationwide.
Jeff Stanfield: So, the big argument was is that flooded corn, the ducks are getting more nocturnal and they’re not and I’m not talking about the migration deal because we didn’t have no winter and that’s what’s going to dictate your migration anyways, it’s going to be winter. On the pressure deal – goose has like where we hunt out here, the roost lakes don’t get jacked with much those geese get somewhere to roost, no bait screws with them on water. They only get hunted in the fields. So half of their situation, they’re not getting jacked with these ducks, they get it on the water and in the field. And I live in a place with no refuges. So I’m not dealing with all that. But I have noticed in the last couple of years, more and more people are talking about the mallards are getting more and more nocturnal and it is probably going to be pressure related.
Ramsey Russell: It is. I’m not talking about corn fields, it’s like on my property down to South Delta, Mississippi, which is mediocre duck hunting in the best of years. If we don’t get out there were 2, 4 day we go out there and we do a lot of disking and water management as we can to promote desirable grasses and broadleaf. If it gets away from us, we get a bunch of coffee weed and the same thing happens. It’s a worthless habitat except that because the duck having hunting pressure, they get in there and we can’t hunt them. So we go in, we spray, we patch it up. Now, we take a 40 acre hole that we can’t hunt with the areas that are clear if we let the coffee weed get away from us, there’s no nutritive value in coffee weed or we go out there and manage it to where we can access the whole 40 acres and hunt those ducks. And what we see, the ducks aren’t really coming on us to feed their coming in – if you want to shoot mallards, when the mallards are in our part of the delta, you generally need to stay out there past 9 o’clock from 9 to noon, 9 to 1 that are coming in pairs or small groups is when we’re getting them, I mean we’re just having to be patient, wait them out.
Jeff Stanfield: I don’t think we’re going to see duck hunting –
Ramsey Russell: I don’t believe in the outlaw and corn. I don’t believe that the cornfields that’s holding them up. I believe you’re seeing a causing cause and effect. They’re finding value in a wide open or a wide span of vertical structure that does have some feed and they’re finding sanctuary in there is what I – and I think they’re responding nocturnally because of hunting pressure. Because of all the modern convenience and the modern implementation of – Man, as someone who’s traveled six continents duck hunting, we Americans have elevated duck hunting to art form the camo, the ammo, the chokes, the guns, the machinery, the boats, the motors that fully fuzzed decoys we’re killers and the best duck hunters you’re going to find else while are going to be an emulation of Americans at best. I mean, we hunt and we’re passionate about it, man. We don’t go out like my granddad did, my granddad was a duck hunter and he went out 12 days maybe a year. He didn’t take off work and take vacation and skipped business meetings and conferences to go shoot ducks, that’s what he did in his off time. Well, man, we all take off Christmas break and skip basketball games and everything else to get after these ducks there’s just too dang much hunting pressure. What are you going to do? I don’t know.
Andy Shaver: Well, that’s kind of my next or question, what are some things that you think could improve our current situation without giving up too much? I mean, and that’s another thing this is an American pastime.
Ramsey Russell: If you can’t have spatial sanctuary. Like I went out there and hunt with buddy, John Wills in California for about I think we hunted 12 days. We jumped all over the Sacramento valley to grasslands, just Lord have mercy 2000 miles. I put in 12 days up and down highway 99. Public, private you name it, marshes, rice fields. And one thing as we were setting up these dates and I started threading together these hunts, John said, well, it’s going to be a hard problem is going to be working around shoot days and I did not understand what he meant until we started threading these hunt together. And they’ve got 107 days season in the Pacific Flyway, but none of those state WMA’s are shooting 107 days. You shoot on Wednesdays, Saturdays and Sundays. Trust me on Sundays, every duck coming in, probably not being shot at on Saturday. And likewise a lot of the clubs out there, same thing could be said about some of the clubs in Utah, they’re only shooting two or three days a week. And so they’re affording, not only might they have spatial sanctuary, a geographic area that those ducks can go and not be shot at, but they have temporal sanctuary, long period of time that the ducks can get into do ducky things and imprint on that property and continue to use that property. And so when the weather is right and the stars line up, you can go out there and shoot them. And I think there’s a lot of value in that now. What it costs to hunt at a club member or lease or something like that or if you’ve got an outfitter and you’ve got 60 days booked with clients coming in and out, how do you do that? I don’t know. You know, I’m saying?
Andy Shaver: Yeah, and I look at our situation here and we’ve got November, December and January. You got to make money. And I mean, it sounds bad but you want to compact everything into that narrow time frame. But then you got to look at kind of what you’re doing to your resource.
Jeff Stanfield: We’re going to take off a day here next year though. We’re going to take off on Wednesday about every two weeks just so we can have a freaking day off. That’s it. Just for that reason only not because I’m worried about bird pressure because we don’t put a lot of pressure on our birds compared to a lot of places, we’re pretty lucky here. But just so we can have a damn day off. But when I first got into business, there wasn’t a lot of outfitters, there was very few outfitters to be honest with you. There was a lot of deer outfitters in Texas, but there wasn’t any waterfowl guys. There damn sure wasn’t very many people run an operation like we run now. And you could go from Knox city Texas to the Canada border and the only pressure them birds got put on was the first couple of weeks in Canada when the Americans would go to Canada. Even back in the early 90s, there wasn’t a lot of guys that went to Canada. There were people up there but now the birds get pressured from September 1st until the last day of duck season.
Ramsey Russell: That’s right.
Jeff Stanfield: I mean that’s the honest guy deal. I don’t think anybody wants to outlaw corn, I think a lot of people want to see him putting water on corn, I don’t have an issue with him putting water on corn. But I don’t understand why it’s illegal for someone to go plan a cornfield and thrash it to me it’s the same principle.
Ramsey Russell: I didn’t know it was legal to do that.
Andy Shaver: No, it’s not. You have to leave it standing.
Jeff Stanfield: You have to leave it standing and flooded. That’s legal, you can’t thrash it. But I don’t understand if you’re going to let someone flood a corn field, a field that’s not been picked and you’re going to let them flood it, I don’t understand why it’s illegal to have a field and just shred it. I mean, you’re still doing. I don’t understand why it’s illegal to do that if you’re going to let them flood it it’s the same thing.
Andy Shaver: The normal farming practices is what confuses me. Like, you’re telling me that plant in the field and then flood it with water, that’s a normal farming practice, that’s the loophole we’re going to go through?
Jeff Stanfield: There’s nothing normal about that.
Ramsey Russell: Well, I’ve said this for a very long time, the more you live, the more you learn. I’ve seen where my favorite places worldwide to shoot ducks are not agriculture at all, flooded or otherwise. It’s boring hunting agricultural landscape to me, I would much rather be in a natural marsh or just a natural habitat. Some of the places Cho’s and I’ve hunted together, some of the places I’ve seen around the world where those places still exist. These vibrant wetlands that don’t have any agriculture and it’s just very rewarding to get off into a very natural environment, there’s plenty of good habitat for ducks. We’ve got to feed the world here in America, so those days past. I’m not, I’m not saying, I don’t like farmers or believe in farming or support the farmers, I’m just saying I do like to hunt natural areas. Good, vibrant, healthy wetlands. And over on our own place, we find a lot of value in cultivating natural, moist soil plants. Just smart weeds and sedges and grasses and things that nature, we find a lot of habitat value. A lot of waterfowl utilization when we hit it right, the ducks come down.
Jeff Stanfield: What about this, Ramsey? And a guy made the point to this message me and he goes, Jeff, he said, I’m a working guy, I’ve got a family. He said, my hunting is my hobby, but I can’t afford to put a lot of money into it I’ve got to send kids to college and stuff. He goes, flooded corn is a rich man’s deal that the poor man can’t do. And that’s a very good point.
Ramsey Russell: You can’t penalize a man Jeff for having to save money and spending how he wants.
Jeff Stanfield: No, I don’t have a problem with them and even doing it, I don’t care if you flood corn, I don’t. I do not have any problem with that at all but I see where this man is his outlook is, it’s just for rich guys only. But I think if you’re going to let people flood corn, I don’t understand what the hell because when you bait, you’re not helping just a few ducks that get shot. If you have a field 160 acre field and you flood 160 acres of corn and you kill a 1000 ducks on it this year but you feed 30,000 ducks. Well, you’ve done a great service for them other ducks and all the other things that are there. But you ought to be able to take 160 acres and shred corn and do something else to bait your field because that’s all you’re doing. You’re hunting over a baited field.
Ramsey Russell: Well, corn is a grass, Japanese millet is grass, barnyard grass is grass. What’s the difference? Flooded grass is a flooded grass. I’d argue.
Jeff Stanfield: Well, that’s a really good point, I never have thought of it that way. But can you shred that millet down the second year you can.
Ramsey Russell: No.
Jeff Stanfield: I thought on the second year, you could, the first year, you couldn’t I thought on the second year you could.
Ramsey Russell: That is naturally established. You can go in there and mow it and shred it, but not if it’s been planted that year.
Jeff Stanfield: But you got to wait a year to do it.
Ramsey Russell: Yeah. And we only mow a natural grass, as frankel tops or barnyard grass or whatever have you like that? We only mow enough to float the decoys. We leave the rest standing when possible or roll it down or something. Because it’s seemed like millions of acres I walk across mud flats, spreading Jap and millet. I’ve never killed a duck, never, I’ve never killed a duck with a crop full of jap millet. But I was talking to a buddy of mine that’s got some old catfish ponds, bells on and all they do is moist soil and Jap millet. And I asked – he’s a veterinarian, I asked him one time and get my dog looked at, I said, have you ever killed a duck with a crop full of Jap millet? And he goes, no, I have not. But some college kids from college program came down and was walking through his pond sweeping with little butterfly looking depths and doing invertebrate biomass studies, he said, our gap millets had the high amount of invertebrates. And that’s what those birds were in there doing. They weren’t eating the seed off of Jap millet, they were utilizing that, substrate that deteriorating grass stalk to get the invertebrates off, whatever you want to call it, water bugs, arthropods, baby crawfish, fairy shrimp, that’s why they were in there.
Jeff Stanfield: Well, this would have been a good year to have some winter to see if we would have got to push. I wish we have got this front we got in December to see –
Ramsey Russell: Can you imagine, when that big ice hit the Deep South on us, we’ve got a 20 acre, fishing lake average depth 6ft, no habitat for ducks whatsoever. And somebody was over at camps sent a picture, there were 6000 mallards and pin tails sitting on that. But that’s only place they had, they were probably water bodies throughout the Deep South with duck holding out like that just waiting. And it’s like I told my son Forrest, some of those ducks that were down because of this cold weather were probably down for the first time in generations for the first time in 3 or 4 generations, they saw the Deep South, I hope they remember it. I can remember when I was his age, we used to get those clippers that would come down and I’ll drive a little Toyota four center at the time and when those big clippers would come down, the first thing to do is find a piece of cardboard between the grill and in the radiator, so you have heat and you trust your radiator wouldn’t freeze and we had ducks back in those days.
Jeff Stanfield: Yeah, when I first got in business, the winter that we had compared to today is just completely different. We have little days, but you could count on who is going to get two or three Alberta clippers every year. You’re going to get some push of ducks or you’re going to get the weather and we’re not getting it now, but I really wish we have got that front early in the year to get those birds off of the flooded corn to the boys in Louisiana and then would see that it’s more weather related than it is food related. There’s corn everywhere now.
Ramsey Russell: I was talking to a waterfowl professor not too long. I’ve talked to several of them, these telemetry studies are becoming big and phytolatry is what they call a duck’s relationship or fidelity for a certain piece of property. Like some of these spec studies, these female specs come off the arctic and they fly down to Louisiana and they don’t just come to Louisiana they land on the exact same 40 acre rice field that she always lands in. Year after year they’re coming to a very precise place. And you start looking at some of their flight patterns, it looks like they’ve been shot from a bow and arrow straight as an arrow they’re flying to a certain little spot that’s ducks. And then you don’t see them during hunting season but you go out after the season first week of February, there’s ducks everywhere. Well, we need to open the season in February, now the ducks have been they’re just been hiding in sanctuaries. One of the biologist was telling me about a drake mallard that spent the entire duck season on three sanctuaries. He just went from one to the next to the next, the next a week after duck season is covering the entire county and that to me is a function of hunting pressure, it’s a function of hunting pressure. And I don’t have the answer for it, I don’t want to stop duck hunting no more than anybody else does but it’s something we’ve got to come to terms with. We’re wigging these birds out man. And there’s all kinds of – this past season, just road tripping hunted 21 states, all four flyways, tons of species and it was everywhere. It wasn’t just Mississippi or Louisiana, it’s everywhere. Nationwide you’re dealing with these problems here.
Andy Shaver: Everybody’s saying the same thing everywhere you’ve been to.
Ramsey Russell: Now let me throw this at you. I went to Delaware, you’d be shocked at the quality of hunting in places and parts of Delaware. It was shocking. And I did hunt a cornfield. And for the life of me I don’t understand I hunted one cornfield that was pretty productive. It had belt deep water and the birds could access the corn if they wanted to, it was a tiny little corn planting. I went to another one and those corn were chest high, the water was let below your knees. I mean a duck can’t float like a hummingbird and pick the cob, they might jump up and get some. Most of the corn consumption I saw walking in off the ears were black birds and things of that nature has been picking on it. But the area we hunted in front of the pit, was just moist soil. And that’s where we were killing the birds and it’s moist soil. But now here’s where I’m getting out about Delaware, it’s Atlantic flyway and the limit is two mallards. You’ll shoot a black duck or two or some green wing teal maybe a shoveler. But I got to say, coming out those days with a pair of mallards and maybe a black duck and a couple of teal, it felt like plenty. And it didn’t take as long to shoot two mallards as it did 4 or 5 or 6 or 7. So, then again comes out temporal sanctuary. And I was thinking myself man for the quality of hunting, If I could go out and shoot two mallards today, I would choose that in a heartbeat over some of the hunt that I happened to do. You all had Brian Huber on here not too long and I met with Brian out in California hunting wood ducks with him one morning, we got to talking about back in the day that the California speckle belly limit was two, you go out bam bam, it’s just like shooting a pintail bam I’m done. Well, then the limit went to four on the best of days, it takes twice as long as to shoot four as it does to now it’s 10. What’s the mindset of a hunter? Stay there till you get the limit? And now you can’t hardly shoot those specs because –
Andy Shaver: I think you touched on something there. I think that should be something that we look at first before we start eliminating taking off days where you can’t hunt or maybe restricting on fields that you can hunt. I think we should take a good hard look at how high some of these limits are. In Oklahoma, it’s a 8 geese.
Jeff Stanfield: No 8 Canada’s then you can shoot two specs, you kill 10 freaking geese that’s ridiculous.
Ramsey Russell: That’s a bunch. I don’t know what the answer is, but my oldest son is 23 years old and before he was born, let’s say it was 97 98, they came out with adaptive harvest management plan. And I remember the first year the limit was two mallards in Mississippi flyway. It’s been 6 ever since. 6 ducks, 4 mallards ever since. His entire lifetime all he known is 6 ducks. And my question is, people say, well duck hunting is not a numbers game and maybe when you’re old farts like me and you Jeff that have shot a bunch and done a bunch, maybe it is more of a quality experience than a numbers game. But like yourself, I shot a bunch of ducks back when I was young, it was a numbers game back when I was young. And I don’t penalize somebody for getting new into it and not have – it’s a stage in a phase you go through and they should want to do it. But it’s a numbers game too because there is a limit. And to go out and play a hard game in duck hunting and a lot of places, especially in public land. And let me tell you what those public land hunters out in California hats off total respect. Those guys are among some of the best duck hunters I’ve seen. If they’re consistently bringing ducks out because it’s a hard hunt. And you go all in and you only kill 3 ducks. Well, it’s like going to a movie paying $20 to go see a movie and the projector breaking halfway through, you feel cheated. You feel that I didn’t measure up, I didn’t get my limit and I played a hard game. And for a young guy or an average hunter, I get it. When I was that age, but what if the limit was 3 or 4, how would they feel? Would they be happy?
Jeff Stanfield: That’s how I got into goose hunting. I grew up duck hunting and when I was a kid growing up, the limit was 10 or it was on hunter point system. Our limit was 100 rounds of shells. Whatever we took 100 rounds out with us whenever we shot in 100 rounds, we’d come home if we shot 12 ducks or 63 ducks that morning, that’s what our limit was. I didn’t grow up in the right situation, I know that but it was a different time in my life. But as a kid, that’s what I was getting used to. Well when they went from the point system, we went to three ducks, well I was probably 15, 16 years old, 17 years old, we’ll shit, it was no fun to shoot 3 ducks when you were used to going out and shooting, 40 50 and 60 in the morning. So, I started goose hunting because the goose limit was the same thing and that’s how we started goose hunting more than duck hunting. But I grew up duck hunting but if I would have grown up in the limit was three, I would have still loved to duck hunt but that mindset when I was a kid was a hell, we could shoot 10 at one time, now you can only shoot 3? And you can shoot 10 pin tails when I was growing up and they can shoot one. Now, I think the duck numbers are off. I don’t think we have the ducks that they say we do and I think we have more damn pin tails they say we do. But after talking to Brian, I think the problem is there’s a lot more pin tail drakes than there are pin tail hens.
Ramsey Russell: I’ve seen that a lot. Delta waterfowl Chris Nikolai, Delta waterfowl was telling me delta waterfowl is proposing 30 years we’ve been restricted bag limit for pin tails. And because of that skewed population, you’re talking about. 6-1 to 8-1 drake per hen is putting undue pressure on the pin tails. And he said that delta waterfowl advocates a modification to the pin tail bag to be three pin tail daily in the continental 48 states with one hen. If I’m just having a great day and I say, you know what? I need my teeth kicked in. All I’ve got to do is post a limit of pin tail drakes from Mexico on the internet. The limit is 15. Well that’s absurd, we only killed one in California. But you can kill 8-10 in Alaska 6-8 in Canada 15 in Mexico one in the continental US. There’s something wrong. It’s not hunting pressure that’s killing pin tails, it’s not those mean old American rich hunters down in Mexico shooting 15 a day, there’s more pin tail killed in opening weekend in California that has killed in Mexico the entire year. And that’s just fact. There’s so few hunters going to Mexico relative to California or Arkansas or somewhere else. Since the 70s, no teal farming is where the pin tails are going, millions upon millions of eggs have been disked under or run over by equipment or something because those birds historically nested in short grass prairie and most of that short grass prairie has been converted to agriculture. There’s no teal farming to hold the soil in place, so they don’t choose but it’s what their options they nest in last year’s barley stubble, wheat stubble and here comes the tractor to plant this year’s crop. That’s where your pin tail are doing in the continental 48 you know what I’m saying. So, I support delta waterfowl and I’ve talked to a gentleman he’s scaup biologist, he doesn’t practice it right now, he does something else. But in the past, he worked for AL he runs some of the scaup banding studies. He wrote his thesis on scaup productivity and this blew my mind. I’m sitting in a duck blind in North Dakota and I hear this conversation. What’s wrong with scaup? Now, I’m in the Deep South, scaup is not our bread and butter bird but get up north, get up to those guys in North Dakota Minnesota Lee Cho’s Wisconsin, I mean, scaup are a big freaking deal to these guys. It’s their bird man. And it just blew my mind to hear this conversation. And what is wrong with this, Jeff? That the population of scaup comes back to 750,000, the limits two. The population of redheads is 2.5 million birds, the limit is two. The population of scaup is 4.5 million freaking bird the limit is one.
Jeff Stanfield: Because of biologists,
Ramsey Russell: What in the heck is going on? So, you go somewhere like Harvard de grace, Maryland to hunt Susquehanna flats or the Chesapeake bay and there’s bazillions of scaup out there on the water but the limit is one. And you talk some of these old timers about body boots and they remember when they were young and they were the muscle setting up the big body boots spread for the old timers today. Now they’re the old timers and there’s no duck hunters coming behind. There’s no young people coming behind them to help them set up because the limit on scaup is one.
Jeff Stanfield: Why is that? What’s the reasoning do they say?
Ramsey Russell: Who knows?
Jeff Stanfield: I don’t know shit about scaup or however you say it so we don’t shoot very many of them here. I do think that pin tails, we need to quit shooting hens. I think that they need to just not let you shoot hens, I’m good with two or three pin tails. I think that’s a great idea. But I would take the pin tail hen to 0. Now that hurts as an outfitter because you get some guys coming to flock, don’t pick out a white from a brown.
Andy Shaver: You can’t do that.
Jeff Stanfield: Why?
Andy Shaver: There’s no way. As a guide, I would never call the shot on a group of 10 tails if we couldn’t shoot a hen. There’s no fucking way. Not in a million years would I call the shot on that.
Ramsey Russell: I agree. You got to have a Mulligan Jeff because it’s imperfect days and imperfect hunters and the sun gets in your eyes and the birds flying left to right or right to left or as cloudy as foggy, it happens. It just happens.
Jeff Stanfield: I had a guy one time –
Andy Shaver: I mean, a north Wind day, you wouldn’t be able to pick out anything sun’s right in your eyes.
Jeff Stanfield: Well, I had a guy one time and we were shooting it was our one limit spec and we can shoot four Canada’s if you shot a spec. And this guy asked me and this is no shit, he goes, could you sit up here in front of me and point out which ones are speckled bellies, which ones are Canada geese? One of them has got fucking orange legs, one’s got black legs, how fucking hard is that?
Ramsey Russell: Better than mines some days.
Jeff Stanfield: I was like what the fuck?
Andy Shaver: Sit down here and point out to me, before I pull the trigger.
Jeff Stanfield: If you can’t pick that out, you think I’m sitting in front of your ass when you got a gun then you’ve lost your damn mind.
Ramsey Russell: Jeff, if I’ve asked the same questions to some people a lot smarter than me about the duck population, I’ve wondered because there’s lies, damn lies and statistics but I really do have confidence, I have confidence in the duck numbers. I really truly do. I have confidence in the people that are doing the best they can to count these ducks but I do wonder if we don’t need to reexamine things like bag limits and hunting days and things of that nature. I just wonder if we need to. It’s possible that we need to do that and that’s what I’m trying to say. I’ve got faith in the system but I just wondered it in time. Like, for example, mallard ducks. A lot of the governance or a lot of the determination of how bag limits and days and quotas, let’s call it for scaup for redheads, for pin tails is predicated on mallard ducks. Well, there’s only one mallard duck. Maybe there needs to be a lot more money dumped into the system to figure out models for redheads and scaup and canvas bags, we got to hire statistical quotient going into that. I mean, you can’t govern all these species of ducks over mallard. There needs to be some allowance for divers and different life habits and population dynamics and everything else. One of the coolest things – get this and this blew my mind. We go out there to band some ducks right about the time that front was hit a couple of days before that front hit with a guy and one of the traps that he had or two of the traps, he have a slap full of ring necks. Slap full. It was 100 – let’s say 110 ring necks in these two traps, two hens. The day before they caught 100 ring necks in the same two traps and there were zero hens. That’s 1% hens.
Jeff Stanfield: It’s a lot of horny ducks.
Ramsey Russell: How is that even possible? And this is a very smart waterfowl Ecologist, we’re sitting there talking to him later in the evening and he said something, he just wondered out loud is the carrying capacity for hens has met? And it never occurred to me that, males and females have different life cycle requirements have different needs. Is it possible that the reason they’re there’s so few females in addition to predation or whatever average have you is it possible that the carrying capacity for hens has been exceeded? That it is at level. And that’s why they’re not as many hens. Because something’s going on with ring neck and I know that’s a mighty small sample size two catch nights 200 ring necks but it’s just kind of shocking that there are only two hens like 200 something ring necks.
Jeff Stanfield: Now, golden eyes and I believe it’s a golden eyes and it’s a Yankee bird and I can’t remember which one it is. I think it’s a golden eye. The males or the females one of them migrates, 90% of them or something migrate a month before the other one does. And I think it’s going to be the drake goldeneye leaves Canada 30 days before the female does. I’m wondering if ring neck, if the females don’t go back before the drakes do.
Ramsey Russell: I don’t believe so. Now, understand these two catch nights happen right about the time the ship was hit with the fan with that big major cold front we’re talking about.
Jeff Stanfield: Yeah, they wouldn’t have been in there. I don’t know. That’s crazy to think the numbers would be that skewed though. That’s amazing.
Ramsey Russell: It ought to be looked at. And I know shooting blue bills down in Mexico very few hens relatively drakes. I don’t know, Jeff, I don’t know. It’s some real interesting times.
Jeff Stanfield: I wonder what their long term numbers are.
Ramsey Russell: Waterfowl manager in right now.
Jeff Stanfield: I wonder what the long term numbers are for ring necks.
Ramsey Russell: I have no idea. A lot of people don’t like to shoot them, I love them.
Jeff Stanfield: But they’ve saved many of bad hunts.
Ramsey Russell: Yeah, they’re fun to shoot.
Andy Shaver: Well, little bastards are fast. I don’t know, it’s an interesting time that we find ourselves in right now. And I just worry about the future. I’m a young guy. I got kids, I got young kids and it’s just I don’t want to make – I know we’re going to make the wrong move thinking we’re making the right move just because that’s how we are as humans. But something has to give and we need to take a hard look at kind of the way that we’ve been operating the last 20 years. Jeff Stanfield: They say the ring neck numbers are up, but the blue bill numbers are declining as ring neck numbers rise.
Ramsey Russell: 4.5 million blue bills.
Jeff Stanfield: Them pour damn hens, boy they’re getting wore the hell out.
Ramsey Russell: Yeah, interesting times we live in, but you got to go hunting.
Andy Shaver: Yeah. That’s exactly right. But it’s going to be interesting to see –
Jeff Stanfield: This is interesting, in 1949 in Minnesota alone, they killed 559,000 blue bills. Last year they killed 14,000. That’s crazy.
Ramsey Russell: I just think it’s a bigger conversation that we need to have than whether or not the flooded corn in central Illinois. The last thing I’m going to say about flooded corn is this, there wouldn’t be so goddamn many ducks going into it if they weren’t finding some form of habitat value. And habitat value in and of itself because there’s so many dogs utilizing it makes me a fan of it, whether you can kill them in there or not. Whether they’re just going there because they’re being overpressure or not. They’re finding habitat value important and ducks need good habitat value.
Jeff Stanfield: I’m not against them flooding anything. I just think it’s kind of hypocritical on the other end of it.
Andy Shaver: And it’s just weird where they draw the line as what –
Jeff Stanfield: Is baiting and what’s not. There’s 3.6 million blue bills right now, that’s more than there are gadwalls. So, it’s still ahead of the gadwalls. It’s only 3.3 million gadwalls.
Ramsey Russell: There you go. We shoot 6 of them.
Jeff Stanfield: And we don’t see very many of them no more or we haven’t in the last couple of years. But there you go, you shoot six of them but you can only shoot one scaup, that don’t make sense. But the government doesn’t make sense usually anyways. I want to talk to you about hunting in South America. So, what’s the place to go for the guy that wants to go somewhere late spring or late summer here? Is there anywhere to go or they done by then?
Ramsey Russell: Argentina is open from mid-April through about mid-August. And it’s a very long season. And most of the operators don’t start opening, our operators don’t start open until around May one. And that’s when most of the clients want to travel is sometime after the kids are out of school June, July are the most popular date because then the little league seasons are ending up, have family vacations over. They can go out and sneak away for a week and shoot a bunch of ducks. And years ago we used to work down in Argentina just under the standard “booking agent” modeling and we just kind of broke free of that 10 or 15 years ago where we got off the grid, so to speak and found the right operators. And we’ll get choked to tell you about that place where my ashes will be scattered, unless I find somewhere better than I doubt a wheel 130 square mile wetland marsh, it’s the most amazing place. Now, you can’t hardly get there from here but it is the most wild and remote place I’ve ever been in my life and you hunt by yourself in a blind, no bait with a guy not a bird boy that calls birds and works on it. And it’s high species diversity, it’s very high volume and we were a lot of hunters through there, but 130 square mile, marsh hell there’s parts of that marsh you can’t get to, you can’t even drive around for three hours to get to it because there’s no roads around it. And I know from having been down there, there’s birds in that marsh 12 months out the year. It’s interesting to me, there’s a continental migration we understand here in the northern hemisphere to bird some of those geese, you’re talking about the Canada’s are starting up in the arctic and specs starting up in the arctic, the snow geese, starting up around Hudson bay and migrating down the gulf coast and back. You go down to places in the southern hemisphere, Africa, Argentina, Australia and New Zealand there’s no continental migration, the birds are just nomadic. I don’t, I don’t know how a bird knows that it rained 10 cm 500 miles away but they do. The last time we were down in Australia, it was so dry in the Victoria province we were hunting down in the South Australia province and I think the limit was 12 birds and we were limiting daily. And I get up one morning and my buddies are sitting around the table kind of talking quietly themselves. And I said, well maybe we’re going to go out and try to shoot some ducks, it’s not going to be good. We got to pick up and go this afternoon and go to Victoria. I go what? He goes, yeah it rained. What’s 10 cm 4 or 5 inches?
Jeff Stanfield: Don’t ask me that.
“The productivity is so good, it’s an amazing wetland. And again, even though we’re shooting a lot of birds relative to the American limit, you just got to understand that continentally is very low hunting pressure down there, very low hunting pressure. And that’s the distinction.”
We got to go. I said, nah Munn, it was less than 30% the number of ducks. And we get up there in Victoria, we get back in them again. How in the world did that duck know that it rained? And that’s a lot of what you see down in Argentina, that vast marsh we hunt. Birds are coming in to feed, they’re coming into moult, they’re coming in to nest, they’re coming in to eat, they’re coming in to live and then they’re going back out some of them are. And it’s just amazing the flux of birds in and out of that marsh. I can remember one year shooting rosy bills, which I love to shoot, I’m not going to say how many I shot that morning, it was a bunch. And I was dialed in and it was chip shots and as we were coming out, there’s a couple of birds – now, this would have been late July, early August, which is their wintertime. And as we were coming out, we got off kind of in the river channel and then by river, I mean it’s 20ft wide maybe the channel is and I saw a buck with his head down swimming, like a duck hide and swim with a cripple and I hollered him for cartouche in there like no mas, no mas bambino it was a baby doe. And as I talked to the operator about it, he said that the rosy bills that had three hatches that year, it was so wet and so good. So just think about that. That’d be like you’re going out to shoot a duck empowerment in January and they’re being hatch year bird that can’t even fly yet. The productivity is so good, it’s an amazing wetland. And again, even though we’re shooting a lot of birds relative to the American limit, you just got to understand that continentally is very low hunting pressure down there, very low hunting pressure. And that’s the distinction.
Andy Shaver: What about for a guy that’s want to go on a hunt somewhere, not a big spender, what’s the most best bang for the buck that you’ve got for someone to go somewhere else to hunt?
Ramsey Russell: Argentina.
Andy Shaver: That is the best bang for the buck?
Ramsey Russell: Hands down the best duck for the buck. Most ducks for the bucks is going to be real Argentina. And it’s a big internet go find a hunt but I know this as someone that have been down in Argentina since 2000 and when I go to Safari Club International, there’s 30 argentine duck hunting operations on that floor and I don’t represent a damn one of them. I’ve been to their lodges, I’ve been I’ve been to their fields, I’ve shot their ducks, it’s just relative to an average day in Louisiana, Mississippi it’s pretty damn good. Relative to what real Argentina duck hunting is, it’s mediocre at best. And I always liken it to just imagine if you were in Argentina watching rich in tone television and washing these hunts on the satellite that everybody’s got now and you decided you were going to book a trip to America and instead of going to Stanfield hunting lodge or going somewhere great, you got talked into going to saving a few bucks and doing this and doing that and going to northern Georgia, we have a few ducks, but it’s not – you know what I’m saying? The internet is a real big place and that’s what I feel like. I’ve got two hunts down there that truly – my number one hunt in the world, is a place called Las Flores, it’s baited because it’s legal. And we call an operator kind of tongue in cheek and the thing about is he gets context a lot of times when there’s a language barrier, they don’t get context. This outfit gets context we call him the masturbator of the universe and he wears it like a badge of honor. I was in a SCI the last time they had convention February 2020. A lot of those argentines that we don’t work with will come buzz around the booth and buddy Lord help you. And if you in my booth and we’re talking, you’re ready to go and one of the guys walk up and I’m going to let you go, I’m just going to keep on talking to you till they buzz off, I don’t want to work with. And I get on an elevator and that night the show was done and I stepped on the – it’s like a crowded elevator. So, I’m sitting here just looking at the front of the elevator because all these people behind me and right when the door started shut this some buck crowds his way in. Now he’s sitting right next to me in a full elevator and he starts in on blah blah blah and I indulged him, you don’t bait. And boy he got that finger going all indignant, loud. I mean, I’m embarrassed as all these people in a crowded elevator, looking at, he’s carrying all of si senor, I paid, I put out my bait. I’m like, no you don’t. Man, dumping corn in front of a blind every 8 to 10 days when your class right there and shoot them is not baiting and he said to me something like, I put out five tons of corn, he’s yelling five tons of corn daily he puts out and I said, my operator is putting out 1.5 tons of corn daily. 1.5 tons of corn daily in front of 40 blinds and shooting every 5 to 8 days or something. And I know it makes people uncomfortable talking about the subject of baiting, here in America were prohibited, there’s a reason why it’s prohibited, but down there it’s not. And not only is this place baited though, he doesn’t let you go in there, lollygag around to 11 o’clock to noon. Now, we’re talking at that temporal space. This man is baiting, putting out 200 pound of corn in front of a blind every single day for four months and he wants you in and out. And if it’s light enough for me to see with my naked eye at 07:30 AM, at 08:30 AM I’m sitting on the tailgate of a truck and me and you got our limits, which is 50 ducks per morning. It’s fast and furious. The afternoons is 15. We leave at 3 o’clock drive 15 to 20 minutes to the blind and usually by 04:30, 04:45 were sitting on the back porch drinking cold beer, watching the sun go down with our 15 ducks hanging. And it’s just a real fun. It’s like imagine going to Disneyland. I mean, it’s like a Disneyland of duck hunts. I’ve done it a bunch. My clients love it. It’s convenient. You don’t have to – I had a 92 year old client one time and I don’t mean one of the young 92 year old. This guy was 92 years old and the last hunt on face birth he ever went to was that hunting and it was a bad year. It was flooded and it took a lot of work, but they got him in their comfortable where he could enjoy the hunting. And it’s just that kind of place and to the complete opposite end of the spectrum is the first place I was talking about 130 square mile marsh. It’s wild. It’s pure, it’s the coolest place I’ve ever set foot. The very first morning I hunted there was about 9 years ago and one of the ladies we hired down in Argentina 10 years ago it kept telling me about this place and I wasn’t interested, it was too far to go when we went down there to scout, we were just bouncing around, we ended up there. In the first morning I walked in ankle deep marsh not quite a half mile but a long way. And we stopped throw out a few decoys and throughout the morning that bird boy was tugging on me and point the ducks and I left with a bunch of ducks, 70 ducks I shot that morning, but I never will forget just stopping and as far as I could see, it looked like part of the Louisiana marsh and there were ducks in all directions. And I realized in that moment that first day, number one of my ashes scattered in this marsh and number two that I had walked a million miles through similar habitat throughout that country looking for this place and I realized how special it was. And I told an outfitter, it’s about a 10 hour ride, if you drive in a van from Buenos Aires. It’s about a 10-hour ride. In the last 52 km is a dirt road unless it’s been raining then its mud boy that’s chocked them about it. It took us hours to get down that last 52 km and there were two trucks, one truck, drank a whole bottle of whiskey before that we got to camp just like 52 km of four wheel drive mud riding. But once you’re there, you’re 5 or 10 minutes from the blind. And I told that operator the first time I said, I love this hunt, I want my ashes scattered in this marsh, I won’t sell any hunts. He goes, why? I said, it’s too far drive, folks ain’t going to do it. And sure enough a lot of people just cannot be inconvenienced on vacation to make that drive. That is a very big. I’m sitting in Brandon Mississippi it would be like driving to Dallas and back. Roads are muddy in a day. But once I’m there there’s nowhere else in the world, let alone Argentina that such habitat exists. It’s not even like going to a place, it’s like going to a time, it’s like driving. It’s like I get into a time machine and 10 hours later I wake up in the 1800s, that’s what it means to me and we’re practically sold out. We stay sold out down there. Clients are kind of caught on. People don’t even call up there and they don’t even know the name, they say I want to go to that wild place. but though that Argentina and their seasons are exactly just the whole southern hemisphere, their seasons are exactly six months behind us. So, August, September, October November, December, January, February, August is like February down here. July like January, it’s our peak winter.
Andy Shaver: Yeah. I want to go back to the duck numbers real quick. Do you think some of the problem could be that the reason guys are not seeing the ducks like Jeff that thinks now all of a sudden the numbers are skewed. You think it’s because of the pressure you think it’s because they’re hiding?
Ramsey Russell: That’s my humble opinion. I think the ducks are patterning hunting activities, that’s just my humble opinion. Obviously when you have a warm winter the bulk of the migration is not coming down, they don’t have to, there’s plenty of habitat up north. But yeah, I believe that Andy I believe that I think they’re sitting in those cornfields of those tickets or wherever they can get away from hunters until the sun goes down then come out and feed without getting shot, that’s what I think.
Andy Shaver: Is that the traveling decoy you got beside you?
Ramsey Russell: Yeah, look at that. You see that on the internet this year?
Andy Shaver: Yes, I saw that. Is there anywhere you can sign on it anymore, or is it all filled up?
Ramsey Russell: You have to start signing over name. There’s a story but I got asked by a lot of people about this decoy and it’s just an old herder decoy and it’s really a lousy choice to sign on a lousy choice to – I had thought when I was going to do this travel decoy around all these people I hunted with, I probably hunted 120-130 days or times between mid-September and end of January and February. But I had thought that I was floated everywhere I went and that’s a lousy decoy to do. Because you remember the more herded phone decoys, they lose their paint and lose to scratch real easy. But I’ll tell you all about this, I feel very strongly. A lot of people say, what’s the point where you get everybody to sign it? Next time we do a meeting, I’ll go to my game room over at camp and show you all some of the background there but I just found over the years, I don’t collect birds, but I do have a lot of mounted birds. And I noticed every time I started telling a story about that bar headed goose, about that snow goose, about that red crested poacher, about that pin tail, about that garden about whatever. Any time I started telling a story about that bird, about that hunt, it always came around to people and that was what was so amazing to me, was this hunting season we travel around hunting was hunting with these people. And many people that shared, they’re part of the world and their slice of the pie and their stories and I just really found a tremendous amount of value in doing that, so now I’ll hang this decoy and next time I go to camp I’ll hang it up in my game room and it’ll be just a tribute to all these many people are hunted with.
Jeff Stanfield: It’s damn interesting.
Ramsey Russell: I’ll tell you why that’s important, Jeff is this decoy belonged to a friend and a client of mine and I know that because the way it was rigged with the screw in the bottom. Most of his other decoys had his name on the bottom this one doesn’t, but I know the way he wrapped this put this wood screw in that phone because he is and I’ve forgotten about it and I’ve taken it to camp, put it up on the shelf and I went to go get an old wooden black duck decoy I had probably use it next year and this decoy was right next to it, I took it down, I looked at it and I remember I’m going to tell you the man’s life, he was the kind of guy we travel, there were mornings I would wake up after him carrying on the night before we’re telling stories and jokes I would wake up and my stomach hurt like I had done crunches from laughing so hard the night before he was that guy, he brought out the best in people. He was just a very, very generous and giving man, he called me up one day out of blue and he said, hey, I’m cleaning out the garage, you want some decoys? What you got? He said, I got a bunch of old herder decoy burlap and just got a big sack of a massive sack of them. About a year or two later his life ended in tragedy. Because we all got demons that we have to deal with. And as I walked by my game room and I see a picture of him, he and I hunt together, I think about that. I think to myself I shared the best times or some of the best times of that man’s life with him in a duck blind. And that kind of gets back to the point of why I wanted to – as I’m meeting people around the country and around the world to have them sign it. And it’s just more because I really do treasure the times and the people and the stories. A lot of people would ask man, it just blows my mind, so many people were asking how in the world you meet all these people and it’s like, you know them your whole life, you step into a duck behind you, shake hands, you never met them but it’s like you all are family. I said man, it’s just because we’re all duck hunters. It don’t matter how man acts on Facebook, you meet him face to face in a duck blind in that moment you’re just duck hunters.
“Yeah, I think that’s something that separates waterfowl hunting from any other kind of hunting because you get that opportunity to bond in the duck bond. You don’t get that in a deer stand, you don’t get anywhere else. It’s an exclusive thing to waterfowl hunting and that’s why some of the bonds that we formed in the field and even through this podcast.”
Andy Shaver: Yeah, I think that’s something that separates waterfowl hunting from any other kind of hunting because you get that opportunity to bond in the duck bond. You don’t get that in a deer stand, you don’t get anywhere else. It’s an exclusive thing to waterfowl hunting and that’s why some of the bonds that we formed in the field and even through this podcast. There are people that we might not align with politically or socially or anything like that, but if we get them on this podcast or if we see them out in the field, just like you said, they’re just duck hunters and we just want to hear their story.
Jeff Stanfield: Best conversations in the world are that 15 minutes before legal shooting time and it goes from the greatest stories in the world to tell Jeff to shut the fuck up, it’s about time to shoot.
But that is what happens.
Ramsey Russell: In general you think about it. If you took the average duck hunt, the best duck hunt, 30 minutes 6 guys. The trigger pulled, if you added up the put a timer on the trigger pulls, it’s just seconds, it’s moments in an hour and a half hunt, let alone a hunt till lunch. And I’ve always felt that the time between the volleys where real duck hunting and real life happens. I can remember when my sons were graduating high school, especially this day and age man, they got football, they got this, they got a cell phone, they got girls and but man, when you’re in a duck blind, you talk about things, you just ain’t going to talk about the rest of the time. And man, doesn’t feel good to go somewhere, it is politically incorrect as a duck blind or a goose blind. Doesn’t it feel good that there’s still somewhere like that in the world that you can just let your hair down and say what you want to say?
Jeff Stanfield: I’m in my element, there.
Ramsey Russell: I am in my element. My wife criticize me all the time coming back from – been gone two weeks, three weeks, five weeks or months, whatever my language is pretty bad man. It made red pots blush.
Andy Shaver: Mine is too. That’s funny that your wife says that because my wife says the same thing, like, she made a comment not too long ago. Like man, last summer you were doing real good, but now you’re just kind of like a sailor. I’m like, well shit it’s just who I’ve been around. But you mentioned that, I can remember a couple years ago, I had a father and a son and it was just them two and they were duck hunting. And same like you said he was in football, baseball, wrestling, track his calendar was full of the son’s was. And he was a senior in high school. And I remember that dad telling me after that hunt was over that they talked more on that two days of hunting and being out here at the lodge than they had almost his entire high school career. He felt like he re-met his son just in the time being out here. I mean life’s busy. You get ship. It’s hard to parse out 30 minutes of your day, if you got a wife and two kids of one on one action and he did, he said, I feel like I’ve talked to my son more this weekend than I have in his whole high school career.
Ramsey Russell: I guarantee you. Look, nobody, I know not one person listening go duck hunting and go through all this stuff to watch a sunrise, I can do that on my front porch right now. We’re out there to shoot water fowl, I get it. But seriously is it just me? Am I just so damn old because when I think back to any hunt I had this year, the story always goes back to the people or to what we talked about and where we hunted it, the ducks are just a small part. I can’t remember how many ducks I shot on any given morning. I can remember certain ducks, like I’ll tell you one of the craziest things we’re talking about pin tails earlier, I was out in the central valley of California with John Wheels we were sitting in a pit blind and I didn’t feel it man, it was 9 o’clock before we got there, we tried something else that morning and the way the decoys was set up, I just didn’t feel like bam, right off the bat we both get our pin tail, well that’s great. We didn’t get skunked. There was a bazillion pin tail floating around in rice Chex. And well there’s a record, we shot a pair of mallards, shot a trio of wigeons and first one thing went another will it climbed on up till about noon. He said, man, you ready to go get a lunch burrito? I ate burritos for whatever day, 14 days straight and they were excellent. But I was sitting on six ducks at this point, I’m like, well John I kind of hate to leave a duck on the table and a bald eagle flew over the far side of the field and man, did the pin tails get up? I bet 1500-2000 tails from 30 yards to the left on my side to 30 yards on the right on his side and 30-35 yards thousands of pin tail started streaming over. We’re done on pin tails. I’m looking pintail, shoveler bam. Duck number 7 was a shoveler. And I thought boy right about time you think you’ve seen it done at all, you pass on 1500 pin tails to kill a boot lip. But it’s all about that limit sometimes even to me. But I can remember so many things that happened that morning that John and I talked about, I remember a phone call we got, I can remember so much about it beyond just the number of ducks. And I heard you all talking to Cho’s the other day. I’ll ask you all to say, will you agree that nearly everybody listening would value quality hunt over a quantity hunt? A quality hunt.
Jeff Stanfield: No, but I would. But a lot of people don’t. A lot of people about blind. Ducks are the religion and the blind is the church.
Ramsey Russell: Yeah.
Jeff Stanfield: And that’s why we do it.
Andy Shaver: But back to what you said though, I don’t know. I think if you rewind the clock a couple of years, yeah, most people would rather have a quality over quantity. But the way Instagram is baby, you got to get Instagram famous and it’s all about the quantity.
Ramsey Russell: I think that some people though and I don’t think body, I’ve got way too many friends and way too many clients that are just over the number. Like I say, I hunted 4 flyways, 20 states all them hundreds of people I hunted with, well, nobody mad at him. One of the coolest hunts I did out in California, we went shot geese with the white brothers. And I was talking to Jonathan on the way out the night before, he’s like, no, we won’t shoot a limit. I go no geese? He goes, no, we’re going to see plenty of geese, we can shoot a limit of snows and pollution but we’re just not going to do that because the geese were going to see tomorrow, the geese we’re going to hunt all season. They say there’s 20,000 geese around, they said that that’s all we got. And they play the highest A game, the highest game of goose hunting I’ve ever seen. Let me tell you, we shot plenty of them but when the big mobs come in, they would let those 2000 land 15 yards away and walk off and walk further away from us and then wait on another play where you had just 5 or 10 so birds come in and we can make those numbers and not educate the mass flocks. And so on the one hand, it was the highest quality hunt, I can remember. I can’t tell you how many we shot a pile of them, but not a bunch. Not a limit, far from the limit. But it was the highest quality hunt for that many ducks and geese or shooting the geese, pollutions and snows to be landing in your lap all morning long. It was one of the highest quality hunts I’ve ever been on and the numbers became irrelevant. We could have shot 120 geese. What the hell are we going to do it with 120 geese, but we didn’t. We shot plenty.
Andy Shaver: That’s right. And I wish more people had that mentality. We saw that a little bit this year with just because COVID kept so many people in the homes, people were excited to be out of the house. So we did see a more appreciative bunch of guys out here and I don’t know. Yeah, but you’re right. And I think it’s the majority of the hunters out there. The guys that are going to be doing this for the long term, the guys are going to be doing this 5, 10, 15, 20 years, they would take a quality hunt over quantity hunt. It’s a guy that he’ll be out of here in another two years. First time he gets his teeth kicked in on a regular basis, he’ll be out of here. That’s the guy that’s all about numbers right now.
Ramsey Russell: Well, if you’re all about numbers you’re in for a world of disappointment with all the topics we cover tonight, don’t you think?
Andy Shaver: I think so. They probably turned it off a long time ago.
Ramsey Russell: They probably did.
Andy Shaver: Well, Ramsey, we appreciate your time, my friend. Where are you going to next?
Ramsey Russell: South Africa. Well, let me say this, let me preface this. Right now, Argentina is closed. Don’t ask me why, but they’re closed. Liberal government similar to say California, they’re closed. They’re struggling to get their vaccinations after the people. We had thought they would open, they have not. We’ve heard they might open in April that remains to be seen, they’re closed we can’t go. So, if they open at any time between now and August this year, double R will be heading that way pronto. I’m scheduled to be down there from April 22nd that ain’t happening until about the 4th of July. But in late August we did not get to go last year, we got to hunt schedule for South Africa. And I really boy, I tell you, COVID just got in the way but you got Mexico, you got Argentina and of all the places I’ve hunted the world for the guys that just loves the taxidermy, for guys that love volume for guys that love adventure, man Africa right there with it. That to me represents one of the top three hunts in the world outside the United States would be Africa, Argentina and Mexico, not necessarily in that order, but those 3 crown jewels.
Andy Shaver: What’s the logistics on the travel for that? Because it’s not very bad.
Ramsey Russell: It’s a real long flight. From Atlanta I believe it’s about 14 hours of Jedburgh, it’s a long flight. But other than that it’s not bad. We get there the times all wonky, so we’re stay in a bed and breakfast that night, get up the next morning and catch up with the outfit and start hunting. And the hunt we actually do is – it took a long time to thread this hunt together. But I’ve got to outfitters both in South Africa, one of the few Malanga province one in Zulu land and we’ll book a hunt either lodge but the granddaddy hunters say go to go 3 or 4 days to each one because the species diversity and different hunting terrain and hunting opportunities upland and geese and ducks and it’s just a huge adventure. And we worked with Jake Latendresse he’s got, we filmed it last time we were down there and it’s going to make an epic episode. A little video we put together for.
Jeff Stanfield: Well you need to be safe down there and watch yourself. We’re going to get out of here, we’re fixing. We have a thunderstorm hit us, we need the rain.
Ramsey Russell: Thank you all I enjoyed it.
Andy Shaver: Thank you for coming on.
Jeff Stanfield: Ramsey, I appreciate buddy. God bless you and have a great, summer bud.
Ramsey Russell: You too. Thank you all, see you.
Jeff Stanfield: Most interesting man in America.
Andy Shaver: That’s it. Him and Lee, they’re all cut from the same cloth.
Jeff Stanfield: You think when they get off here they and say, well that Andy, he’s an interesting guy.
Andy Shaver: Yeah, most of the time.
Jeff Stanfield: Okay. Most of the time. We got with us tomorrow.
Andy Shaver: We’ve got it. It’s scheduled so speak freely.
Jeff Stanfield: Last year we had a power outage.
Andy Shaver: Oh, fuck we’ve got thunderstorm coming now.
Jeff Stanfield: But hopefully we’ll be out here by then, it won’t be like that. They did have a funnel of Paducah I just saw.
Andy Shaver: Well, you missed a good chase stage.
Jeff Stanfield: No, I didn’t. No, not at all. All right, thank you all for listening to us. God bless you all. We got a new shirt up. It’s on the page. Check it out, it’s the tornado shirt. What’s the saying on it and I forgot already.
Andy Shaver: Tornado warning.
Jeff Stanfield: Tornado warnings. Got the geese coming in. Big honker podcast, appreciate it. God bless you all. Go check out all of our sponsors. Check out blind grass. They’re not just a grass company. They’ve also got gun what the fuck am I trying to say? Long episode. They got waterproof shell bags, they work. Pacific Calls, Gun Dog Outdoors, Goose Creek. Bang Tail Whiskey, Stanfield hunting outfitters, Dive Bomb Industries, Boss Shot Shells, Dirty Duck Coffee, Lucky Duck and the Looking Glass Duck Club.
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