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Save it for the Blind Podcast

Podcast de California Waterfowl

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Welcome to the Save it for the Blind Podcast. Dive into the world of duck hunting, conservation, and legislation. Join us for insightful discussions on preserving both tradition and nature. Our podcast isn't complete without tackling the legislative side of things. Discover how local and national policies impact hunting seasons, bag limits, and wetland preservation. Interviews with experts and policymakers will shed light on the intricate balance between hunting traditions and the need for sustainable practices. RSSVERIFY

Todos los episodios

121 episodios

episode Ep. 121 Dr. Bob McLandress on Building Early CWA artwork

Ep. 121 Dr. Bob McLandress on Building Early CWA

Mallard nesting at Grizzly Island, the story about CWA’s first biologist, and how research, banding, fundraising, and education all took shape Jeff Smith and Carson Odegard sit down with Dr. Bob McLandress—past CWA president and one of the key figures in the organization’s early growth—for a look back at how California Waterfowl found its footing. Bob traces his path from Canada and Ducks Unlimited into graduate work under Dennis Raveling at UC Davis, then into CWA in 1985 as the organization’s first biologist—not its first employee, as the old story often goes. From there, the conversation moves through the early Grizzly Island mallard nesting work, the discovery of surprisingly high nest densities, the launch of CWA’s first major banding efforts, and the way one research project quickly snowballed into fundraising dinners, youth education, development work, and the broader conservation mission the organization carries today. Episode highlights * Bob’s path from Winnipeg into waterfowl biology, and how early work in Canada helped set the course for his career. * The real story behind the long-running myth: Bob was CWA’s first biologist, but not its first employee. * Why the early Grizzly Island nesting work changed the conversation around California mallards. * How CWA’s first banding efforts got rolling—and how those early permits and projects helped build the program that followed. * What early CWA really looked like: volunteer-driven, underfunded, chaotic, and full of people trying to build something that mattered. * How one biologist’s job quickly turned into fundraising, education, development, and helping define CWA’s long-term role in California conservation. 🦆 If you love hearing where this work really started, hit Follow, leave a quick review, and share the episode with your blind crew—your support keeps these conversations rolling and the flyway thriving.

27 de abr de 2026 - 59 min
episode Ep. 120 Chemistry, Calls, and Canada Geese with Chance Wadsworth artwork

Ep. 120 Chemistry, Calls, and Canada Geese with Chance Wadsworth

Jeff Smith and Carson Odegard sit down with Chance Wadsworth, owner of Quill Creek Championship Calls, to talk goose calling from the inside out—how a chemistry background helped him design the Mach One, why he refuses to sell a call he hasn’t proven at a high level, and how contest calling sharpened the way he hunts real birds in Wisconsin. The conversation covers mentors, stage nerves, field philosophy, traffic hunting, and the kind of repetition it takes to actually get good. Episode highlights * How Quill Creek started — Chance launched the company in 2024 after roughly two years of prototypes, testing, and refining a goose call he felt confident enough to take on stage. * Built like an experiment — with a chemistry background and CAD-based design, he worked through more than a thousand call combinations to understand how length, wall thickness, contour, and overlap affect both sound and feel. * Mentors matter — Chance credits Tim Steele and Mike Benjamin for helping him build the foundation and accelerate as a contest caller. * Field calling vs. contest calling — the crew breaks down the difference between stage performance and practical hunting, and why some contest calls still absolutely work in the blind. * Why he cares so much about calling — in traffic situations, when birds are not already committed to the food, Chance believes calling becomes a huge part of the game. * Wisconsin goose hunting realities — leasing fields, learning roost patterns, hunting cut corn and beans, and why he believes leaving spreads out too long can educate birds. * Advice for new contest callers — be okay with not winning, use YouTube and good mentors, put in the work, and understand that progress comes from repetition. If you care about goose calls, competition, and the crossover between stage skill and real-world hunting, this one is packed with practical insight and a lot of heart.

20 de abr de 2026 - 49 min
episode Ep. 119 Tracking the Flyway with Cory Overton artwork

Ep. 119 Tracking the Flyway with Cory Overton

Jeff Smith and Carson Odegard sit down with Cory Overton for a data-driven look at what really happened during this season’s migration. Instead of relying on blind chatter and guesswork, Cory breaks down what tagged birds actually showed—how prolonged fog affected movement, why a warm winter kept birds north longer than usual, and how some California-marked ducks are spending more time in places like the Northeast Zone, Klamath, and other areas north of the Sacramento Valley. Episode highlights * What the tags revealed this season — GPS-marked birds helped explain why many hunters felt like the “big push” never really came. * Fog and warm weather effects — prolonged fog and one of the warmest winters on record appear to have slowed or altered normal migration timing. * Local vs. migratory birds — some mallards and gadwall tagged in California are molting north of the Valley and, in some cases, barely leaving those regions at all. * How far birds really move — the conversation gets into flight speed, regional shifts, and why some birds bump around California rather than making dramatic southbound moves. * Where ducks are sitting now — Cory explains where large concentrations of birds are holding in early spring and why those areas remain attractive. * Mexico, Baja, and Southern California connections — the crew also digs into which species continue farther south, and how often marked birds show up in places like Wister, Baja, or mainland Mexico. * The future of tracking tech — from GPS units to more advanced devices that could one day measure energy burn and flight conditions, Cory explains where waterfowl science is headed next. * Why recovered tags matter — as tracking tools get smaller and store more onboard data, getting those devices back from hunters will become even more important. If you’ve ever wondered where the birds actually went, why they stalled out, or what modern science can tell us about the migration, this episode is packed with insight straight from the data. 🦆 Like the show? Hit Follow, leave a quick review, and share it with your blind crew—your support keeps these conversations rolling and the flyway thriving.

16 de mar de 2026 - 58 min
episode Ep. 118 Season Recap: January Averages, Year-to-Year Swings & Pintail Puzzles artwork

Ep. 118 Season Recap: January Averages, Year-to-Year Swings & Pintail Puzzles

Jeff Smith and Carson Odegard wrap the season with a clean, property-by-property breakdown—January numbers, year-over-year changes, species quirks, and the big themes (fog, late rains, road work, king tides) that moved the needle across CWA hunts. Expect straight talk on mallards and pintail, why Staten keeps trending up, and how Goose Lake quietly turned in one of its best mixed-bag years. January by the numbers * Staten Island: 4.4 birds/hunter; GWT + specks led. * Goose Lake (Tulare Basin): 4.2; teal-heavy, strong mixed bags. * Quimby Island (Delta): 3.4; GWT + mallard. * Sanborn Slough (Butte Sink): 3.4; deeper water pushed hooded mergansers & ring-necks. * Grizzly Ranch (Suisun): 2.6; GWT + spoonies, up from December. * Butte Creek Island Ranch: 2.6; flood/high water effects. * Potrero (Suisun): 1.7. * Denverton (Suisun): 1.5. Season takeaways * Mallard softness: Big drop at Quimby (248 → 101 mallards) and a lighter mallard picture statewide. * Goose gains where it counts: Staten goose harvest jumped (specks 231 vs. 146; snows 156 vs. 75). * Species surprises: Goose Lake went from 0 → 33 redheads; Staten logged a long-tailed duck and Eurasian wigeon. * Weather & work mattered: Long tule-fog stretches, night road work, king tides, and late rains reshuffled use patterns—good for some units, tough on others. * Pintail reality check: A 3-bird limit didn’t blow the doors off harvest totals—availability and conditions were the limiter. Quick stat stack (program-wide) 1600+ teal • 1040+ spoonies • 390+ mallards • 330+ specks. If you hunted with us—thank you. Keep an eye on calwaterfowl.org [http://calwaterfowl.org] for spring turkey, pig hunts, and next season’s applications. 🦆 Like these intel episodes? Tap Follow, leave a quick review, and share it with your blind crew—your support keeps these conversations rolling and the flyway thriving.

9 de feb de 2026 - 40 min
episode Ep. 117 Senior World Champ Duck Caller — Craig Wilson artwork

Ep. 117 Senior World Champ Duck Caller — Craig Wilson

Jeff Smith and Carson Odegard sit down with Craig Wilson, owner of River Oaks Outdoors and a Senior World Duck Calling Champion to trace his path from SoCal refuge rat (Wister/Kern) to Idaho mallard country, and what that journey taught him about scouting, pressure, and staying calm on stage. Craig breaks down how to practice with purpose, the real differences between Main Street contests and meat calling, and why late-season California birds demand restraint on the call. He also dives into the shop side—how he builds custom call displays (smart dowels, snug fit, clean glass) and the little design details that keep a lanyard organized and a collection looking sharp. Episode highlights * SoCal to Idaho: how refuge days shaped today’s mallard-first approach, and why scouting beats slogging * Contest nerves & routine: making the jump from good caller to stage-ready—and staying clean in Round 3 * Meat vs. Main Street: what actually carries to ducks versus judges * Late-season reality: why whistles and quiet spreads often beat hail calls in California * Shop talk: River Oaks Outdoors display builds, dowel sizing, and protecting your calls the right way 🦆 If this episode sharpened your calling or got you tinkering with your setup, hit Follow, drop a quick review, and share it with your blind crew—your support keeps these conversations rolling and the flyway thriving.

2 de feb de 2026 - 50 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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