Duck Hunting Report
Lake Okeechobee Florida
December
9 & 10, 2006
Florida
duck hunters husband and wife Brad and Jackie Otto (Lago, FL -
e-mail: jackieotto@msn.com), Jim Duncan and his son (Largo, FL
- e-mail: JMDSQUARED@aol.com) had some action shots on Lake Okeechobee
during their first morning of two mornings of duck hunting with
Captain Ron on December 9 & 10, 2006. They all got their limit
of Florida mallards on each day. Above photo is of their first
morning on December 9th. Ducks were taken over decoys in the Moonshine
areas on Lake Okeechobee.
Young
Duncan is shown here with his and his dad's limit of
Florida mallards on December 10th.
He also nailed 2 blue-winged teal
December
10th morning of duck hunting. They all got their limit of
Florida mallards on December 10th
Click
here to view photos
of their December 8,2002
Lake Okeechobee duck hunting trip with Captain Ron
Here's
a e-mail testimonial I received from the above party:
Duck
Hunting Testimonial - December 13, 2006 - Lake Okeechobee Florida
Subject:
(no subject)
Date: 12/13/2006 8:11:52 A.M. Eastern Standard Time
From: JackieOtto@msn.com
Reply To:
To: fish@ronsguideservice.com
Thanks again for a fun time this past weekend, we didn't slaughter
the ducks but we had a good time and that is what matters.....like
your new airboat....it's top of the line. See you next year, we
are off to Louisiana to hunt some flooded rice fields, will let
you know how we do.....
Thanks,
Jackie Otto
Click
here to view photos
of their December 8,2001
Lake Okeechobee duck hunting trip with Captain Ron
Click
here to view photos
of their January 13,2001
Lake Okeechobee duck hunting trip with Captain Ron
Click
here to view photos
of their December 15 & 16,2000
Lake Okeechobee duck hunting trip with Captain Ron
Here's
2 e-mail testiomonials I received from the above duck hunters
and an article Jackie wrote for the Onshore Offshore Magazine
about their duck hunting adventure with Captain Ron:
Duck
Hunting Testimonial - December 9, 2002 - Lake Okeechobee Florida
From: Jackie
Otto <JackieOtto@msn.com>
To: Cap'n Ron <fish@ronsguideservice.com>
Subject: Article I wrote
Date: Monday, December 09, 2002 7:42 PM
Ron,
Here's the
article I just wrote, please note that I put your name, fax and
cell number as the "guide service" we use.....hope it's
good business for you and your future....let me know if anyone
read the article in Onshore Offshore Magazine that calls you.....
I will send
you a copy of the mag when it's published, it may be on the website
instead of the magazine, which is getting very popular..... the
attachment is the article, pre-published.
Jackie
Opening
Morning on the Big O
Its
quiet, so very quiet that you can hear the crackling of dried
cattails when the birds, snakes and gators are making their way
to safety from you, the human intruder. You can hear the ringing
in your ears created from the roar of the airboat ride out to
the hunting grounds of Lake Okeechobee. This is a vast area of
watery grass flats, matted hydrilla, sawgrass, cattails, flooded
timber and boat trails. So vast that without a GPS guiding you
to and from, you will get lost. After all, I have been taken out
there in complete darkness and dropped off with only a bag of
decoys, shotgun, ammo, snacks and the hopes of flights of ducks
to fly over our pre-scouted area. The lake is large, so large
that it is intimidating, its beautiful, its wild and
its full of life.
The abundance
of wildlife on this lake is to the point of unbelievable, wild
hogs, deer, snakes, alligators, fish, rare birds, common birds,
and yes the ever-so-popular waterfowl ranging from Ringbills,
Blue and Green winged Teal, Mottled (Florida) ducks, Gadwalls,
Fulvous Tree ducks, Wood ducks, Spoonbill ducks, Pintails and
an occasional Greenhead Mallard. These are the waterfowl that
we are after.
The decoys
are set, your gear is stowed, now the wait for legal shooting
time. You are backed up into a stand of cattails, sitting on a
stool watching the first few Teal to land into your decoys. They
are calling to each other, a raspy chirp, chirp your heart is
pounding, your ears are ringing, youve got twenty more minutes
before you can take that first shot. The sky is overcast, so it
matters not if the moon is out, you can barely see the horizon,
the wind is at your back, your set up is picture perfect. What
could go wrong, what is wrong with this picture? I havent
mentioned that when I was dropped off, it was with three other
very close friends. Now its really a perfect setting, beautiful
ducky weather, decoy spread looks enticing, being
with your friends to experience a wonderful morning of duck hunting,
still: What could go wrong?
The one on the left (above) breaks silence and says, Ive
left my ammo bag in the airboat, and I have no ammo. The
roar of the airboat was not even close to the roar of laughter
from his best friends and wife. He usually being the leader, head
master blaster has made the fatal error of not taking
care of himself and now is going to have to grovel and beg for
ammunition from the rest of us, his wife, his friend and his co-worker
and friend. Did we take advantage of this moment? You bet! As
his wife, it was useful; I got a lot of promises, and his friends,
they got a lot of laughs. We all pulled together and gave up some
of our ammo so he would not have to sit back and watch the rest
shoot away.
Did we get
any, yes, but that isnt the end results. The end results
is being with your friends when the world is waking up in the
morning, when you hear the whistling of wings overhead, when all
else just doesnt matter but right here, right now. To share
these times with others makes the experience not just duck hunting,
it makes it a memory, a story to be told, year after year when
we make our annual trip to Lake Okeechobee. You can bet that he
will never forget his ammo again, and that we will never let him
forget the time he had to beg, borrow and grovel with his friends,
but mostly how hard the four of us laughed, forgot our troubles,
the worlds troubles and were just friends.
The results
were Florida Mallards, Green winged Teal, Blue winged Teal, Ringbills
and another story to laugh and enjoy about for future duck hunting
trips. We were the envy of the boat ramp, we had grins from ear
to ear, and we hugged, laughed, joked and had more ducks than
any other groups out there. The competition is null and void in
our group, we take turns, we help, we learn and we shoot together.
We rotate first shots; we hold back so the others can fill their
bag limits, we switch seats, thats what friends do.
The airboat
ride back is amazing, as you dont realize how vast the area
is until you see it in daylight. Lake Okeechobee is one of the
wildest areas I have hunted in Florida. We charter a guide service,
which is the fastest way to get to the ducky areas.
Heres
the guide we use, he will put you on the ducks. Tell him Jackie
sent you.
Rons Guide Service
Cell: 863-287-8484
Fax: 863-946-2699
Check out his Website
www.ronsguideservice.com
Check
out our 2 day 1 night Duck Hunting Lake Okeechobee Special below
DUCK
HUNTING LAKE OKEECHOBEE SPECIAL RATE
2
Days 1 Night 1
Person Rate
For Only $175.00
Required
Reservation Deposit Is: $150.00
2
Days 1 Night 2
Person Rate
For Only $325.00
Required
Reservation Deposit Is: $300.00
GRATUITIES: in customary amount of 20% are not included
in above rates.
Click here for more information on our Duck Hunting Lake Okeechobee
Special Rate of
2 days of duck hunting with a USCG licensed guide and a night
of lodging. This package besides being an affordable duck hunting
event also allows a duck hunter to take "two limits of duck" instead of a one day limit simply
because each duck hunt is done on two different days!
Click
here for information
on our duck hunting day rates.
Click on
any of the below links to view pictures of duck hunters, duck
hunting reports and just how the duck hunting on Lake Okeechobee
was during each month of the 2002, 2001, 2000 and 1999 duck season
calendar year.