Bay of Plenty Times

Starting the duck season with a bang

- Rebecca Mauger

"It’s about focus, respect and safety. You learn to respect the animal, and you learn about yourself as well. It’s also your time out, you sit there and you’re forced to relax." Anna Wallis

Anna Wallis is buzzing this month.

Like many hunting enthusiast­s, this is her month to get out in the great outdoors, to relax and unwind, hone her duck calling skills and shoot some ducks.

The opening day of game bird hunting season was on Saturday, with most of the Western Bay of Plenty Fish and Game Club members up early on missions, joining 50,000 game bird hunters nationwide.

Wallis, who is the club president, said it was the highlight of the year for many game bird hunters — a month of shooting.

“Some of the guys in our club take a month off work for this, just about all of our guys in the club get out there on opening day.”

Wallis went shooting in Rerewhakaa­itu and had a successful day out with friends and family. Most years they shoot at the Katikati estuary.

She will be out every weekend until the season ends on June 6.

“I love duck calling, calling the birds in is an achievemen­t in itself.”

Her son Brett, too, is perfecting the art of duck calling, and he likes to retrieve the ducks.

“It’s about focus, respect and safety. You learn to respect the animal, and you learn about yourself as well. It’s also your time out, you sit there and you’re forced to relax.”

Fish & Game New Zealand regulation­s state the limit of mallard, grey duck and paradise shelduck this year is a daily bag count of six each in the eastern region. There are other Western Bay of Plenty Fish and Game Club outings to help the eco-system, supported by the Fish and Game Council, Wallis said.

“If there was no [shooting] season, many game birds would become pests,” she said.

“As far as swan and geese go, our club does an annual goose shoot in the harbour that is purely to help with the environmen­t and the ecosystem.”

Anna thinks ducks were slightly down in numbers from last year “but Fish & Game monitor the bird levels and if they were getting down on numbers they would hold back on the length of the duck shooting season”.

No meat goes to waste, Wallis said. “You’re putting food on the table. Some people make it into salami or sausages.”

Wallis encouraged people who were interested to join a club.

Locally, there’s the Western Bay of Plenty Fish and Game Club, Kaimai Pistol Club and Te Puna Hunting and Fishing Club.

“We have about 50 members in our club but with these new regulation­s, we won’t have a club if these are put in place.”police are encouragin­g public submission­s on proposals for new regulation­s for shooting clubs and ranges.

The new laws will create requiremen­ts for all shooting clubs to be approved, and all shooting ranges to be certified, by the Police Commission­er.

A statement issued by the New Zealand Deerstalke­rs Associatio­n Bay of Plenty branch earlier said the changes could force smaller clubs and those unable to pass on the extra costs to their members to shut.public consultati­on on the proposals closed on May 4. The collated results of submission­s will be considered by Cabinet, alongside police recommenda­tions. Once submission­s are considered, final proposals will be considered by Cabinet for approval.

 ?? ?? For Anna Wallis, gamebird hunting season is a mix of excitement and relaxation.
For Anna Wallis, gamebird hunting season is a mix of excitement and relaxation.

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