#1
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Harvey
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#2
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Kind of a **** post what with all the human suffering going on right now..... oh and the teal will be widely scattered due to water everywhere. Good luck
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#3
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Quote:
I've paid for pond pumping, I would have been pi**ed if I had just paid and then got the storm flooding on top of it. Guess it just came out wrong and at the wrong time. I apologize to you and anyone else who was offended. |
#4
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I could care less if my farmer had pumped before or not. That is part of me paying a lot of money to lease a blind from him. I pay the same regardless if he has to pump or not. Part of our agreement is we will always have water. I am sure he has the pumping covered in what I pay him a year if he has to. Plus we only keep few inches of water in our pond.
I recently got into another lease in Pecan Island on the North side that is just past the rollover landing. This is pump off pump on land. A lot of pumping off going on at the moment due to all the rain from the storm. |
#5
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Yep... either way teal will have plenty water everywhere, but then again they might stay in the area longer as well. Probably all the way until regular season.
Good luck guys. |
#6
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I didn't find your post insensitive at all. You are talking about duck stuff, not house stuff....
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#7
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I can't imagine anyone pumping a teal pond a month before the season opens
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#8
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Thank You, I'm glad somebody got it.
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#9
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We like to have water early. The mindset is, once they find us, they will stick around till the season begins. After 36 years hunting the same farm, you tend to figure out what makes them happy.
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#10
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Quote:
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#11
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I like to have water at least 10-14 days before the season starts. Let's hope this little cool front brought them in! My spot in the marsh still has too much water. Hopefully, by next week it should be just right!
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