Originally Posted by MTDan
I've been giving some thought to this lately. I, like most, have been told for years that only flying fowl are legitimate to shoot at. I'm starting to question that though. The rationale behind it is mostly one of "fair chase" but shooting birds on the wing results in huge rates of wounded or recovered birds.
This source suggests that rate is as high as 25%, including many that hunters believe they missed cleanly, or that took a stray pellet from a shot that downed another bird. I know most will claim their rates are much lower, but anyone who says they dont lose an occasional duck is a liar. In my view, the ethical imperative is to kill the animal cleanly and with the greatest chance of recovery, not to shoot it in the most challenging way. Wounding and losing a bird seems the greater wrong than shooting a stationary one. That seems to be the case in deer and Turkey hunting, where shooting a moving target is more frowned upon.

As a side benefit, the breasts and legs are below the water line, and dont get nearly as much shot damage as a bird shot on the wing.

I realize that ricochet risk is a very real safety concern in some areas, but where it isn't, why shouldn't one shoot sitting ducks?



All I can offer up is this and it is merely my opinion.

If it is a legal means of hunting than have at it. Hunting high fence is legal, but it ain't for me. Shooting a duck on the water is like shooting an elk tied to the hitching post. I believe that any animal I hunt has to have every means and ability it knows and has to evade me and my choice of weapon. In the case of Waterfowl and Upland birds flight is one if not it's best abilities. I can live with a few lost animals here and there, it's going to happen. That is why it's called hunting and not killing.


Eat Fish, Wear Grundens, Drink Alaskan.