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Lodge lures waterfowl, a hunting tradition

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Tony Vandemore and his dog, Junior, return to the blind after retrieving a mallard that one of Vandemore's customers shot during a recent duck hunt near the Swan Lake National Wildlife Refuge. (Photo by Brent Frazee/Kansas City Star/MCT)

(MCT) — SUMNER, Mo. — Tony Vandemore put the finishing touches on his decoy spread and paused to admire his work.

“If I were a duck, I don’t think I would last very long,” he said after arranging several dozen block decoys interspersed with battery-operated motion wing imitations. “This setup looks great to me.

‘If I were a duck, I’d come right in.”

Some of the ducks Vandemore was hunting apparently felt the same way. Moments after he tucked into some flooded cover in the Timber Hole on his Habitat Flats hunting operation in northern Missouri, he watched as a flock of mallards reacted to his loud calls. The flocked turned, then headed toward the blind where the four hunters Vandemore was guiding were hiding.

The mallards, their green heads glistening in the morning sun, circled once, then twice before cupping their wings and gliding down on the decoys.

When Vandemore shouted “Take ’em,” guns began blasting and ducks began falling. In short order, three mallards tumbled to the marsh and Junior, Vandemore’s black lab, raced out to do his part.

“That’s what it’s all about,” Vandemore said. “I don’t like shooting them high.

“I like it when they’re completely fooled and they’re close. That’s when it’s exciting.”

Vandemore sees that often at the Habitat Flats hunting operation he and three others — Ira and Aaron McCauley and Dan Daugherty — own near the Swan Lake National Wildlife Refuge. “One of our customers called our hunting operation a Disneyland for duck hunters,” Vandemore said.

With almost 2,500 acres of water and 45 blinds scattered in a variety of locations, Habitat Flats is a duck magnet. Hunters can set up everywhere from holes in the flooded timber to flooded crops to shallow marshes with moist-soil foods.

Little is left to chance. Vandemore and his partners have dug dozens of wells to flood the habitat. They also do tireless work on the habitat to ensure that it is desirable to the waterfowl once hunting seasons arrive.

“We’re duck farmers,” Vandemore said. “Everything we do is designed to bring the ducks in. We even try to be cognizant of what the crops look like from above.”

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