Published October 17, 2009 07:27 pm -
A Conversation with the Duck Commander
Chester Moore, Jr column for Sunday, Oct 18
The Port Arthur News
Utter those two words to a legion of waterfowlers and you conjure images of flooded hardwood bottoms, limits of green-headed mallards and a rough, straight-talking man named from West Monroe, La. by the name of Phil Robertson.
A legendary call maker, hunting video host and outspoken personality, Robertson shoots straight and pulls no punches whether he is speaking on hunting techniques or political issues in the outdoors.
“The biggest mistake most duck hunters make is a lack of concealment,” Robertson said.
He and his hunting team “The Duck Men” all wear face paint whether they are hunting in hardwood bottoms or in the prairies.
“We go to great efforts to conceal ourselves and having our white faces looking up at the ducks would send most birds away. I highly recommend hunters wear paint and brush out their blinds really good because it will make a difference,” he said.
A prime case in point is the challenge of concealing all of the cameras and cameramen that go into the production of their long-running series of videos with catchy titles such as “For a Few Ducks More” and their new television show “Duck Commander”.
“Doing the television show was a real challenge because we had to do certain things for the kind of show they wanted to produce. We had multiple cameras in the field and it made hunting much more challenging and problematic,” Robertson said.
The show is based in a reality type of format but Robertson said that is nothing new to him.
“We were doing reality TV before anyone ever heard of such a thing. The Duck Commander videos are about as real as you can get.”
Robertson’s lifetime of waterfowling experience and decades of traveling throughout the country to hunt has given him unique insight into problems facing waterfowlers. He believes one of the biggest problems is a lack of predator control.
“Pretty much everyone agrees we are losing about 85 percent of our ducks before they ever fly down due to predation in the nesting areas. Think about that for a second,” Robertson said.
“What we get to fly down is around 15 percent of the potential ducks. If you have a total flight of 100 million ducks, decreasing predation by only five percent would add 30 million ducks to that. If you could ever get predation down to around 70 percent you could pretty much double the fall flight every year.”
Robertson said he believes if hunters knew just how much of a role raccoons, foxes, mink and other predators played in duck production they might support paying more for federal duck stamps to support predator control.
“No one wants to wipe out the predators. God put them here to do their role, but he also put ducks here for us to hunt and to eat and we can balance things out if we put the effort into it,” he said.
“With fur being out of fashion because of the animal rights people and very little trapping, you have a situation where you have more predators on the breeding grounds than ever and we are seeing the results every fall,” he added.