Re: Ask Don Miller...or other scatters hunters
Posted: Mon Jun 14, 2010 12:51 pm
Yea, it is pretty cool, have a copy of it framed in my office. It mentions W.C. Cross and Mr. Jordon being "fishing buddies". Fishing was a passion to them as were the ducks. My wife's grandma (W.C. Cross Sr wife) told me that W.C. and Son fished a many of Christmas morning. Different times no doubt. These men lived for the outdoors and put little else in front of it.
A funny note: I named my son Jon Clinton with the Jon coming from my side of the family and Clinton coming from my wife's side. W.C. stands for Walter Clinton. Anyways, he was born in 1996 and I do not know how many people thought I was some sort of democrat nut naming my son "Clinton"
. To this day I still have someone ask me from time to time "Is he named after Bill Clinton?".
Back on the Scatters......Mark, do you think Tippo dumped into the Yalobusha back in the day? Maps look like it wants to, but Tippo is a much deeper canal than the Yalobusha. There are a many of zigs and zags of oxbows and sloughs throughout all the acres below HWY 8 that it is hard to really tell what went where. I would guess it changed frequently, thus making it the duck hotspot that it was? Although Dad (and yours too) hunted much greentree areas up this way, I do not remember any hunting stories detailing anyone hunting flooded timber around the Scatters?
Another "link" to the Scatters area being so good is early rice production throughout the area. From just north of Bear Lake woods all the way south till you reach the Hayward Jack's (Malmaison), there was a big move towards land clearing and rice farming. It set up a scenario (that now Stutgartt lives on).....ducks feeding in rice fields all night and then moving to timber / sloughs throughout the day. Most stories of the men who hunted these areas back then will show that it was not a "break your neck to get out there before daylight" type of event. Plenty of ducks would show mid-morning and they would find a spot to hunt during the breaking of the morning sun. With much of those same "rice fields" now planted to trees, the same scenario just does not exist on the scale it did back in the day.
A funny note: I named my son Jon Clinton with the Jon coming from my side of the family and Clinton coming from my wife's side. W.C. stands for Walter Clinton. Anyways, he was born in 1996 and I do not know how many people thought I was some sort of democrat nut naming my son "Clinton"

Back on the Scatters......Mark, do you think Tippo dumped into the Yalobusha back in the day? Maps look like it wants to, but Tippo is a much deeper canal than the Yalobusha. There are a many of zigs and zags of oxbows and sloughs throughout all the acres below HWY 8 that it is hard to really tell what went where. I would guess it changed frequently, thus making it the duck hotspot that it was? Although Dad (and yours too) hunted much greentree areas up this way, I do not remember any hunting stories detailing anyone hunting flooded timber around the Scatters?
Another "link" to the Scatters area being so good is early rice production throughout the area. From just north of Bear Lake woods all the way south till you reach the Hayward Jack's (Malmaison), there was a big move towards land clearing and rice farming. It set up a scenario (that now Stutgartt lives on).....ducks feeding in rice fields all night and then moving to timber / sloughs throughout the day. Most stories of the men who hunted these areas back then will show that it was not a "break your neck to get out there before daylight" type of event. Plenty of ducks would show mid-morning and they would find a spot to hunt during the breaking of the morning sun. With much of those same "rice fields" now planted to trees, the same scenario just does not exist on the scale it did back in the day.