Canoe Hunting for Deer, Antelope, Elk, Moose, Grouse & Geese.

Mustangs Rule

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I have had little canoes, long canoes, ones made of wood, aluminum, and various synthetic materials.


For much of my life hunting season, meant “canoe season” even in the oddest places.


One year I was hunting a semi desert environment, with this stream maybe 5 to 6 inches deep and 5 or 6 feet wide that drained some high mountains. It was a not a flash flood stream that would shrink in a flash but a stable fall little creek. The stream bed was mostly sandy, easy walking in it with dive socks and my LL Bean canoe shoes.


Pulling this little canoe, loaded with a canvas cabin tent, and all the gear for a luxury week long deer hunting adventure was a breeze. I managed to get several critical miles in past the Wilderness Boundary.

I came out almost a week later with a buck in my canoe, which I never even sat in or paddled.

Sometimes all I need the canoe for is to cross a river that is too deep for me to wade across, with my canoe shoes and leggings I cut out of an old dive suit I bought at a tag sale. Did that many times for antelope.

I look at maps, find places for crossing a lake or some protected wetlands that borders road less public land. Often I find pockets of privacy from other hunters, where game animals hide.


For example, I found one place where an otherwise inaccessible large chunk of USFS land bordered a river for a quarter mile. All around was a huge private ranch.


All this canoe awareness began as a kid on my Grandfather’s dairy farm. Bordering it, was a huge beaver pond/swamp maybe 50 to a 75 yards wide and a ½ a mile long. I used to paddle around it in a old noisy Grumman aluminum canoe with a gun rack for three firearms, a .22, a shotgun, and a rusty Marlin 336 in 35 Remington. I shot grouse, ducks, geese and totally unsuspecting deer in the cedar thickets next to the water's edge.

I have lived in four western states, most always rural and I pay attention to maps and land doing lots of scouting.

Near where I lived in Wyoming decades past, there were some lakes and quiet parts of rivers that directly connected to marshland and small ponds.

Gliding in there quietly in the first light morning mist was great way to have a close-up moose encounter. Without a motor, it is legal to shoot from a canoe

Is good to have a big canoe for moose and if there are two hunters, they should agree that only the front one is shooting.



MR
 
Not much beats paddling out of the woods with a canoe loaded down with a buck or bull.

The real fun starts when the river freezes while you’re hunting, rendering the canoe useless.
 
Deer won't move until you stop or change course. Just like watching you jog by or ride a quad past them.

I use a canoe to sneak into hunting areas. When folks are walking into their stands from roads, you'll be golden silently entering your stand from behind, while deer don't expect you to come from the creek. Pssssst don't tell anybody.....
 
Thank you for your fine photos and for asking for photos from me, but most of these adventures i write about now were from my youth through my very early 60's. Rarely did i bring a camera along. Now with my cell phone I take photos of the flies on the wall.
All good. as a novice pack rafter with one such moose hunt behind me I am working on finding more water involved hunt opportunities.
 
Really hoping to use this technique in a couple weeks. Might just be for retrieval but the plan has been draw up. Might do a little paddle board mission as well.

I keep looking good but the options for this in Colorado are pretty weak. Not none, but not much. Have one idea for an elk hunt, but havent had the reason to try it yet.
 
Large plans being made for a north florida kayak hunt this year. If baby LeRoy no.3 doesn't jack it all up
 
I keep looking good but the options for this in Colorado are pretty weak. Not none, but not much. Have one idea for an elk hunt, but havent had the reason to try it yet.
sometimes all you need it for is to cross a river
 
I keep looking good but the options for this in Colorado are pretty weak. Not none, but not much. Have one idea for an elk hunt, but havent had the reason to try it yet.
I am going to hope I don’t need it but my plan a,b,c all involve some type of deep water crossing. And then waders more than likely for my deer tag. Have an otc elk tag, buck tag, and then doe tag across the river. Going for the hat trick in one season and most the plans involving the water.
 
I am going to hope I don’t need it but my plan a,b,c all involve some type of deep water crossing. And then waders more than likely for my deer tag. Have an otc elk tag, buck tag, and then doe tag across the river. Going for the hat trick in one season and most the plans involving the water.
Waders are dangerous if you fall and they fill with water, how deep is your deep-water crossing?

Here is what works for me when canoe hunting plus needing to wade around in water too.

Waterproof Insulated dive booties and over them insulated waterproof LL Bean ankle higher canoe shoes. If a crossing is long enough, they will get wet yet still be warm-ish. I keep a roll of TP to dry them out when crossing is done and heavy rag wool socks to replace dive booties.

Next leggings cut from any old lightly insulated wetsuit bought at a tag sale. Cut them high on the hips to attach to a belt. Unlike waders you can take a crap easy. These are much like native American leggings

Wool shorts. Heavy wool under sweater with a thin dive vest over that.
Next, I like a North Face waterproof long anorak with hood. I put an elastic belt around my waist and around
my cuffs, i cut strong wide elastic bands from motorcycle tire tubes.

Lastly, I like a small Jan-sport backpack, and I put things in there first putting them in zip, lock bags with air left in. Dressed like this I can be comfortable in terrible weather.

Last I like a stainless synthetic carbine with a hollow stock
 
Waders are dangerous if you fall and they fill with water, how deep is your deep-water crossing?

Here is what works for me when canoe hunting plus needing to wade around in water too.

Waterproof Insulated dive booties and over them insulated waterproof LL Bean ankle higher canoe shoes. If a crossing is long enough, they will get wet yet still be warm-ish. I keep a roll of TP to dry them out when crossing is done and heavy rag wool socks to replace dive booties.

Next leggings cut from any old lightly insulated wetsuit bought at a tag sale. Cut them high on the hips to attach to a belt. Unlike waders you can take a crap easy. These are much like native American leggings

Wool shorts. Heavy wool under sweater with a thin dive vest over that.
Next, I like a North Face waterproof long anorak with hood. I put an elastic belt around my waist and around
my cuffs, i cut strong wide elastic bands from motorcycle tire tubes.

Lastly, I like a small Jan-sport backpack, and I put things in there first putting them in zip, lock bags with air left in. Dressed like this I can be comfortable in terrible weather.

Last I like a stainless synthetic carbine with a hollow stock
All different spots. The wader spot is knee deep. The deep water spots just depends on the spot, could be a couple feet or more depending on where I ended up crossing.
 
All different spots. The wader spot is knee deep. The deep water spots just depends on the spot, could be a couple feet or more depending on where I ended up crossing.
Is the water fast moving. what is the bottom like, sandy or rocky, clean or covered with slick mud and moss. Can you get carried away and bounced around?
 
I do a lot of canoe hunting. Not necessarily out of one but to get to areas I otherwise could not reach. The one below is a ultralight Northstar Northwind Solo great little boat to get in and out of places. I use it for the Boundary waters and lakes. If I am floating down into public land on rivers or anything rough I use my old Mad River Tahoe in Royalex.
I have been able to slip into areas that most motor boats cant go especially in the fall and winter when most lakes are low.
pound river buck 2.jpg
 
I do a lot of canoe hunting. Not necessarily out of one but to get to areas I otherwise could not reach. The one below is a ultralight Northstar Northwind Solo great little boat to get in and out of places. I use it for the Boundary waters and lakes. If I am floating down into public land on rivers or anything rough I use my old Mad River Tahoe in Royalex.
I have been able to slip into areas that most motor boats cant go especially in the fall and winter when most lakes are low.
View attachment 390754
Same here. Taken some nice bucks in areas only accessible by boat or canoe at home and Ontario.
 

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