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Family makes time for waterfowl hunting

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John Ontjes, left, Max Ontjes, center, and Jim Ontjes look for ducks on their annual family opening day duck hunt. (Photo by Michael Pearce/Wichita Eagle/MCT)

(MCT) — WICHITA, Kan. — For decades, the Ontjes family has made a big deal of the opening weekend of their favorite bird hunting season.

That passion is still there, but the birds they’re hunting have changed.

“For years all we hunted were pheasants and quail,” John Ontjes said as he talked of his childhood. “Now it’s mostly waterfowl. I don’t think we even hunted pheasants last year, maybe once.”

Ontjes was out early with his father, Jim, and 13-year-old son, Max for Saturday’s opening of the low plains late zone duck season.

A reminder of why the three generations share so many waterfowl hunts came less than five minutes into the new season when a flock of mallards swung over their blind, and Max dropped a hen. The hunters were barely reloaded when about a half-dozen green-winged teal came low over a surrounding wheatfield and then the water, buzzing over the decoys like Star Wars fighters.

Two of the flock splashed down dead after a volley of shots.

Consistent action isn’t uncommon for the Ontjes family, especially on opening day.

Hunting about 40 minutes from their Hutchinson homes, the private pond they hunt is only about two miles from the Quivira National Wildlife Refuge and a number of sizable private wetlands. Through the summer, John and Jim Ontjes worked to prepare the spot, pumping water when needed and covering pit blinds with bundles of cane on a 105-degree summer day.

Though the location is ideal, conditions weren’t Saturday morning. Quivira’s Little Salt Marsh, from where many of their ducks normally come, has been dry for weeks. Passing flocks were common Saturday morning, but close shots often were not.

Unlike most people who stepped outside into Saturday’s 20-something degree cold, John Ontjes didn’t appreciate the calm of Saturday’s dawn. “We could really use some wind,” he said. “Our decoys are just sitting there.” Indeed, they lacked the realistic movement a breeze would have given them.

Another problem is that usually ducks land into the wind, so Saturday’s stillness meant they could come to the decoys from any direction. Several flocks came from unseen angles and were in and out of shotgun range before the three generations could react.

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