HISTORIC DUCK HUNTING STORIES THE GOLDEN AGE OF DUCK HUNTING

HISTORIC DUCK HUNTING STORIES

Most duck hunters want to know what happened in the olden and golden days when the old timers pursued their love of duck hunting, but not everyone has the time nor patience to read through a bunch of books and outdoor journals. So, sit back and relax as a passionate duck hunter of 60 years, Wayne Capooth, author of eleven historical waterfowling books and outdoor writer, recaps from his 40 years of research the hidden riches and treasures of duck hunting by the old timers, who sadly have all passed away! The podcast will cover all facets of duck hunting.

  1. Apr 1

    E-69 WALLACE CLAYPOOL'S WILD ACRES, PARADISE OF DUCKDOM

    It was an extraordinary, exceptional paradise tucked away in the super-funnel of the Mississippi Flyway that Wild Acres came to represent and often described in newspapers and hunting lore as the “Paradise of Duckdom.” Here, year after year, gravel-throated voyagers, migrating down from the north, interrupted their journey to linger on Wallace Claypool’s 1,350 acres of greentree reservoir, where they fed in the nearby rice fields and feed-filled sloughs, rivers, marshes, bayous, and lakes along with feeding on acorns in his greentree-timbered area. Wallace Claypool was a firm believer in physical fitness, exercising every day. He could perform stunts of strength that amazed younger men. Golf was his game back in the 1920s. Then in 1925, he ventured into a sport that would lead him to receive national recognition as a conservationist. He was famously quoted as saying that “if the wild duck is to avoid the fate of the passenger pigeon, somebody must furnish it with food, water, and a place to rest.” Claypool acquired 5,000 acres in 1942 by forfeiture from the state due to unpaid taxes, by Quitclaim Deeds from two Drainage Districts, and land from two different individuals. He immediately built a 1,350-acre reservoir, 800 of which would be under water controlled by levees once completed in 1943. After 1943, the duck population increased steadily to about 200,000 ducks, but duck hunting was severely limited due to WWII. From 1945 onward until the drought years began in1959, which lasted through the first half of the 1960s when hunting on Wild Acres was limited to hunting only three days during the week, Wild Acres’ duck population ranged from 250,000 to half a million. It was a spectacle like no other, bewildering wildlife biologists who traveled to Wild Acres to observe. Even as late as December 8, 1960, newspapers such as the Fort Worth Star Telegram were still calling it the “New Duck Capital of the World." For it was here at Wild Acres that hungry hordes gathered in tremendous numbers in the low, lush wintering grounds. It was here where the hunting was the very best, when the walnut stock was sweat-wet against the hunter’s cheek. It was indeed the "Paradise of Duckdom."

    1h 16m
  2. 06/17/2025

    E 62 DUCKS CAME FOR RICE, HUNTERS CAME FOR DUCKS AND THEY BOTH MET IN THE GRAND PRAIRIE

    Year after year, waterfowl have followed the ancestral Mississippi Flywayand made their usual stops, where along the way they feasted abundantly in theforested White River bottomlands on acres of high-energy pinoak acorns andaquatic plants, like wild millet, Chufa, and smartweed. Before rice production came to the Grand Prairie,ducks were found foraging in the small prairie wetlands, seasonal herbaceouswetlands, the vast flooded bottomland, hardwood forests of the White andArkansas Rivers, and other smaller meandering rivers and bayous. Once rice had been plantedfor the first time in the first decade of the twentieth century in theeast-central part of the state, it spread rapidly throughout the Grand Prairie,mainly in the counties of Arkansas and Prairie and small sections in westernMonroe and eastern Lonoke during that decade and especially during the 1920sand the 1930s. Doing so, prairie lands, bounded by the bottomlands of four streams, the White andArkansas Rivers, Bayou Meto, and Wattensaw Bayou, could not exist and was converted tofarmland, so the prairies essentially vanished after 40 years. Rice changed the flyway intwo ways. For one, it moved a lot of the waterfowl migration from theMississippi River westward to the rice-growing regions of Arkansas. Second, italso shifted lots of waterfowl from overflying Arkansas and going to the ricefields of Louisiana. No place in the Grand Prairie of eastern Arkansas prior tothe construction of reservoirs reaped rice’s benefit more so than the twinlakes of Jacob’s Lake and Pecan Lake in Arkansas County.

    1h 16m
5
out of 5
23 Ratings

About

Most duck hunters want to know what happened in the olden and golden days when the old timers pursued their love of duck hunting, but not everyone has the time nor patience to read through a bunch of books and outdoor journals. So, sit back and relax as a passionate duck hunter of 60 years, Wayne Capooth, author of eleven historical waterfowling books and outdoor writer, recaps from his 40 years of research the hidden riches and treasures of duck hunting by the old timers, who sadly have all passed away! The podcast will cover all facets of duck hunting.

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