Close Menu
  • Stories
    • Hunting
      • Big Game Hunting
        • Elk Hunting
        • Bear Hunting
      • Deer Hunting
        • Whitetail Hunting
        • Mule Deer Hunting
      • Predator Hunting
        • Bobcat Hunting
      • Small Game Hunting
      • Bird Hunting
      • Dogs
        • Hunting Dogs
        • Canine Gear & Accessories
      • Turkey Hunting
      • Waterfowl Hunting
        • Duck Hunting
    • Fishing
      • Freshwater Fishing
        • Bass Fishing
        • Catfishing
        • Trout Fishing
        • Pike & Muskie Fishing
      • Saltwater Fishing
        • Striped Bass Fishing
      • Ice Fishing
      • Fly Fishing
    • Guns
      • Ammo
        • Handguns Ammo
        • Shotguns Ammo
        • Rifles Ammo
      • Rifles
      • Handguns
      • Shotguns
    • Survival
      • Survival Food
      • Wilderness Survival
      • All Survival
    • Conservation
      • Hunting Conservation
      • Fishing Conservation
      • Public Lands & Waters
      • Wildlife Conservation
    • Cooking
      • Recipes
  • Outdoor Gear
    • Hunting
      • Big Game Hunting
      • Bird Hunting
      • Bow Hunting
        • Crossbows
        • Compound Bows
      • Boots
      • Hunting Calls & Decoys
      • Knives
      • Hunting Apparel & Accessories
      • Optics
        • Binoculars
        • Scopes and Sights
        • Rangefinders
      • Trail Cameras
      • Waterfowl Hunting
      • Turkey Hunting
    • Fishing
      • Baits, Lures, and Flies
      • Fishing Reels
      • Fishing Rods
      • Fly Fishing
    • Guns
      • Ammo
        • Shotgun Ammo
        • Rifle Ammo
        • Handgun Ammo
      • Handguns
      • Shotguns
      • Rifles
    • Camping & Outdoor Rec
      • Auto & Truck
      • Camping Gear
      • Hiking & Backpacking
    • Gift Guides
    • Cooking
      • Cooking Gear
  • Shop
    • Shop Field & Stream
      • F&S Shop
      • Hunting
      • Fishing
      • Camping & Hiking
      • Clothing
      • Footwear
      • Gear
      • Outdoor Living
      • Member Merch
      • Journals
      • Gift Cards
      • Membership Gift Card
      • Merchandise Gift Card
    • Shop Field & Stream at:
      • Tractor Supply Co.
      • Amazon
      • Moultrie
      • Yuengling
      • Old Wood Signs
      • Best Home Furnishings
      • Sugarlands Distilling Co.
      • Gokey
      • WearSPF
  • F&S TV
  • Membership
    • Subscription Plans
    • Free Membership
    • Member Login / Create an Account
    • Gift a Subscription
      • Premium Membership
      • Print Membership
Search
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Join the 1871 Club to access two limited-edition Father's Day gifts · LEARN MORE
Field & Stream
  • Stories
    • Hunting
      • Big Game Hunting
        • Elk Hunting
        • Bear Hunting
      • Deer Hunting
        • Whitetail Hunting
        • Mule Deer Hunting
      • Predator Hunting
        • Bobcat Hunting
      • Small Game Hunting
      • Bird Hunting
      • Dogs
        • Hunting Dogs
        • Canine Gear & Accessories
      • Turkey Hunting
      • Waterfowl Hunting
        • Duck Hunting
    • Fishing
      • Freshwater Fishing
        • Bass Fishing
        • Catfishing
        • Trout Fishing
        • Pike & Muskie Fishing
      • Saltwater Fishing
        • Striped Bass Fishing
      • Ice Fishing
      • Fly Fishing
    • Guns
      • Ammo
        • Handguns Ammo
        • Shotguns Ammo
        • Rifles Ammo
      • Rifles
      • Handguns
      • Shotguns
    • Survival
      • Survival Food
      • Wilderness Survival
      • All Survival
    • Conservation
      • Hunting Conservation
      • Fishing Conservation
      • Public Lands & Waters
      • Wildlife Conservation
    • Cooking
      • Recipes
  • Outdoor Gear
    • Hunting
      • Big Game Hunting
      • Bird Hunting
      • Bow Hunting
        • Crossbows
        • Compound Bows
      • Boots
      • Hunting Calls & Decoys
      • Knives
      • Hunting Apparel & Accessories
      • Optics
        • Binoculars
        • Scopes and Sights
        • Rangefinders
      • Trail Cameras
      • Waterfowl Hunting
      • Turkey Hunting
    • Fishing
      • Baits, Lures, and Flies
      • Fishing Reels
      • Fishing Rods
      • Fly Fishing
    • Guns
      • Ammo
        • Shotgun Ammo
        • Rifle Ammo
        • Handgun Ammo
      • Handguns
      • Shotguns
      • Rifles
    • Camping & Outdoor Rec
      • Auto & Truck
      • Camping Gear
      • Hiking & Backpacking
    • Gift Guides
    • Cooking
      • Cooking Gear
  • Shop
    • Shop Field & Stream
      • F&S Shop
      • Hunting
      • Fishing
      • Camping & Hiking
      • Clothing
      • Footwear
      • Gear
      • Outdoor Living
      • Member Merch
      • Journals
      • Gift Cards
      • Membership Gift Card
      • Merchandise Gift Card
    • Shop Field & Stream at:
      • Tractor Supply Co.
      • Amazon
      • Moultrie
      • Yuengling
      • Old Wood Signs
      • Best Home Furnishings
      • Sugarlands Distilling Co.
      • Gokey
      • WearSPF
  • F&S TV
  • Membership
    • Subscription Plans
    • Free Membership
    • Member Login / Create an Account
    • Gift a Subscription
      • Premium Membership
      • Print Membership
JOIN THE 1871 CLUB
Join the 1871 Club Today - Spring Journal Ships in April
Field & Stream
Home / Stories / Hunting / Waterfowl Hunting / Duck Sounds and How to Make Them
Waterfowl Hunting

Duck Sounds and How to Make Them

M.D. JohnsonBy M.D. JohnsonMarch 23, 2026

FIELD & STREAM NEWSLETTERS

ALL F&S NEWSLETTERS

I grew up in northeast Ohio in the 1970s, which meant, as a duck hunter

, I grew up hearing duck sounds from mallards and black ducks, both of which quack. My father and I didn’t attempt to call wood ducks, for as he often said, “they’re either coming here or they’re not.” Teal? Same story; no calling. Divers? Never hunted them because, and to quote my old man again, “they taste bad and they’re not mallards or black ducks.”

Then in 1993, I moved to Washington State and introduced my soon-to-be wife, Julia, to duck hunting. I quickly learned, though, that Washington had more to offer in terms of waterfowl species than did Ohio. It quickly felt like I’d moved to a foreign country, as the birds seemingly spoke another language. And, it soon became apparent that if I were to become proficient in calling these new ducks, I’d have to learn a new way. Truthfully, speaking these second languages isn’t difficult, if you know what you’re talking to, what you’re saying

, and you arm yourself with the right instrument. 

Mallards

The Call ““ Bill Saunders’ The Clutch

Audio

It’s common knowledge, I believe, that mallard ducks “QUACK.” Surprising, perhaps, to some, mallards make a lot of different sounds as well, including the drake’s lispy “DWEEK,” squeals, whines, whistles, chuckles, and short nasally barks. However, it’s the quack that waterfowlers should learn, practice, and apply in the field. 

So, is it necessary for a duck hunter to know 10 different mallard sounds, or is the basic quack enough to convince most greenheads?

“When it comes right down to it, a five- to seven-note “˜QUACK”¦QUACK”¦quack-quack-quack“˜ is all you really need to do to kill ducks,” Saunders said. “A lot of times, I feel like feed calls, single quacks, “˜bouncing hens,’ and different things like that are maybe more for show. I’ve killed thousands of mallards, and I’ve never once thought, “˜Oh my gosh! I feed chuckled those things right to the ground.’ It’s a five- to seven-note greeting type of call.”

Situationally, Saunders went on to say callers may drag those five notes out a bit to get the birds to turn, or speed the cadence up.

Duck Sounds: Widgeon

The Call ““ Slayer Calls’ Whistler’s Mother

Audio

Widgeon are a vocal bird, both in the air and on the water, and it’s easy to imitate their simple two- or three-note whistling call. For years, I used an ordinary dog whistle upside-down to keep the pea inside from rattling and producing the trill. Others, including my wife, use their natural voice. Still others opt for a more conventional widgeon whistle. Slayer Calls makes an excellent and quite elemental whistle, which, in addition to creating widgeon sounds, can also be used to reproduce the calls of a drake mallard, green-wing teal, drake pintail, wood duck, and, for you turkey hunters, the scream of a red-tailed hawk.

Phonetically, the widgeon’s call sounds like “woo, whIT, woo,” with each note being produced in a breathy sort of way. The drake also makes a two-note whistle—“whIT, woo.” Because widgeon are so vocal and often travel in larger groups, I’ve found it advantageous to have as many callers as possible blowing whistles. 

Duck Sounds: Pintails

Photo of a pintail duck about to land on water

Unlike the widgeon’s breathy tones, the bull sprig’s whistle is bell-like in its clarity, and does incorporate a rolling trill. Adobe Stock / Danita Delimont

The Call ““ Haydel’s MP-90 Magnum Pintail

Audio

Unlike the widgeon’s breathy tones, the bull sprig’s whistle is bell-like in its clarity, and does incorporate a rolling trill. Here, a dog whistle will work, sometimes quite well. However, I’ve found that the sprig-specific calls like Rod Haydel’s MP-90 produce a clearer, truer tone.

“There are only so many sounds that pintails make,” Haydel said. “The hen does sound similar to a hen mallard, only much softer and more monotone. She’ll usually make three or four low-pitch quacks, but again, it’s a monotone sound. The drakes whistle, but you have to roll your tongue to make that sound. It’s very simple and easy to do; you block the exhaust port at the end of the call completely with your finger, and do about a one-second trill by rolling your tongue. The sound comes out of the top of the call.”

Duck Sounds: Gadwall

The Call ““ Duck Commander’s Gadwall Drake

Audio

I’ll never forget the first time I heard a drake gadwall. I’d always heard about the drake grey’s odd nasally “dink”¦dink-dink”¦dink”¦dink” call, but hadn’t heard it personally. It was over a small pond and the best I could tell, the gadwall migration was on that morning, for small flocks of grey ducks kept coming and going throughout the day. This particular bird was a loner, a high-flying drake that locked up without hesitation upon seeing the small spread we’d set just outside the smartweed. To accompany his descent into the decoys, he repeatedly made that now-familiar dink”¦dink-dink sound. That is, until my father crumpled him right smartly with an ounce and quarter of steel No. 4s.

Instruments designed to reproduce the dink”¦dink-dink call of the drake grey duck are available, as evidenced by Phil Robertson’s offering. Some men, too, and four-time Tennessee State duck calling champion, Bill Cooksey, being one of them, can mimic the strange sound almost perfectly, using nothing more than their go-to single reed mallard call. The dink”¦dink-dink can work in other field situations, too, particularly where it’s being used as a confidence call.

Duck Sounds: Wood ducks

The Call ““ Flextone Wood Duck Call

Audio

Growing up with an abundance of wood ducks, it was my experience that 99 percent of the woody population will ignore a wood duck call. However, I did on one occasion see a small flock change course and return to a timbered pothole where a cousin of mine, wood duck call in hand, had just called to them in their “peet ““ w-o-o-O-O-I-T” rising whistle. Coincidence? Perhaps, but it was enough to convince me that on that one-in-a-million occasion when a flying wood duck wants to listen, he will. 

Sometimes the high-pitched “creeeeek creeeeek” in-flight call of the wood duck will get a flock’s attention. Then, when they’re within 100 yards or so, the whine, the aforementioned peep-whistle, or simply the rising whistle portion of the call can convince them to light. Better yet, wait until the birds have landed, entice them closer with the promise of company using the whine, and then practice the oft-forgotten art of jump shooting. 

Duck Sounds: Teal

The Call ““ Primos’ Model 889 Blue-Wing Teal Call

Blue-Wing Audio

Green-Wing Audio

There is a difference between blue- and green-wing teal in terms of calls and calling. The basic call for blue-wings is very similar to the hen mallard’s greeting call—the differences being the pitch, which is much higher, and the cadence, which is much quicker. Many folks, myself included, use a traditional mallard call on blue-wings. More air and tongue pressure increases the pitch, and all that leaves is to step up the cadence or rhythm. Teal-specific calls, however, like Primos’ Model 889, are tuned higher out of the box. They do, however, require more air pressure, and a radical departure from the traditional mallard cadence.

Green-wing teal, on the other hand, are what I’ll call “peepers.” They make a high-pitched whistled “PEEP“—short of duration and high in volume. The rhythm when calling green-wings can be recognized phonetically as, “peep, peep-peep! peep.” Buck Gardner’s 6N1 does a fine job of reproducing these duck sounds, as does Sure Shot’s compact 7-IN-1 Rascal.

Bluebills, Canvasbacks, and Redheads 

The Call ““ Haydel’s DC-14 Diver Call

Greater Scaup Audio

Redhead Audio

To make the low-pitched breathy guttural growl, or rising “bbbuuurrrrrr” of the bluebill—Canvasbacks and redheads utter similar sounds while on the water—I use an older Rich “˜n Tone Quackhead J-frame single reed. To make this sound, along with what can best be described as sharp barks, I flutter my tongue while growling into the call. If you’re wanting a diver-specific call, Haydel’s DC-14 is incredibly user-friendly, and features a removable exhaust plug that, when pulled, allows for greater volume. On big water, attracting divers by sound is often exclusively a matter of volume.

Volume is important, but gaining the attention of any duck other than a mallard is simply a matter of speaking their language.

content_waterfowl-hunting,content_hunting,content_stories
Field & Stream 1871 Club

THE 1871 CLUB

The best outdoor stories the way they were meant to be read: in print. 160+ pages. Coffee table-quality. 2 issues per year.

Club Magazines and Hat
JOIN THE CLUB

Recommended Products

M.D. Johnson

    M.D. Johnson’s full-time outdoor writing career began in 1992. Prior to that, he worked with the Ohio Department of Natural Resources’ Division of Wildlife in their Outdoor Skills Unit, helping to coordinate hunter education courses and resources across the state. Highlights Education Johnson earned a bachelor’s degree in magazine Journalism and English from Ohio University in 1986. Today, he serves as a substitute teacher at his local Wahkiakum High School in Cathlamet, Washington, just a couple miles from where he and his wife make their home. Experience Since beginning his outdoor-writing stint in ’92, Johnson’s byline has appeared in over 50 publications, including Field & Stream, Outdoor Life, Fur-Fish-Game, Ducks Unlimited, GRIT, American Frontiersman, and Wildfowl. He prides himself on being an all-around outdoorsman and writer, not specializing in any one pursuit. He can run the gamut from late-season mallards to canning wild game, dehydrating mushrooms, and achieving success using the barter system. Johnson has filmed television shows with the likes of Cabela’s, turkey hunting video segments with Mark Drury’s MAD Calls, and presented hunting seminars for the O’Loughlin Sportsmen’s Show in the Pacific Northwest. F&S Lightning Round Favorite Critter to Hunt: Greenwing teal,Bucket List Adventure: Sandhill cranes over decoys in Saskatchewan with Tony Vandemore,Best Outdoor Advice: “I’ll stay here and wait. You wander off that way. Squirrels can’t count, so he won’t know I’m still here.” —My father, Mick, formulating a plan to waylay a fox squirrel that had seen us and gone into hiding. It worked,Favorite Piece of Gear: Swiss Army Knife. Gift from my brother, Richard, for Christmas in 1979. I carry it every single day and have since.,Favorite F&S Story: “Fishing for Grace in the Age of Social Distancing” by Bill Heavey Notable Work

    Related Posts

    10.09.2025 Field & Steam Hunt - Bighorn-4

    Waterfowl Hunting Montana’s Legendary Bighorn Valley

    March 11, 2026

    6 Tips for Hunting September Geese

    March 11, 2026

    Bonus Geese: How to Hunt February Honkers

    January 23, 2026

    Band Stories: Hunter Kills Consecutive Bands

    January 23, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    1871 CLUB
    Field & Stream 1871 Club

    JOIN THE CLUB

    Spoil your dad with a gift of a Field & Stream Membership, then go the extra mile with our exclusive Father's Day add ons.

    Father's Day Gifts
    JOIN THE CLUB TODAY

    NEWSLETTERS

    NEWSLETTERS

    Weekly recaps of the latest outdoor news, hunting and fishing tips - plus exclusive offers, giveaways and more!

    Field & Stream Newsletter Whitetail 365 The Strike Zone The Strike Zone
    SIGN UP
    F&S PICKS
    An ATV rider on public lands in the West. Conservation

    Trump Orders More Off-Road Vehicle Use on America’s Public Lands

    Federal’s new 6.5 Creedmoor +PEAK standing on a scope turret. Rifle Ammo

    Ammo Review: Federal’s New 6.5 Creedmoor +PEAK Is the Next Step in a Rifle Cartridge Revolution

    Knives

    The Best Early Prime Day Knife Deals—Starting at Just $11

    Weekly recaps of the latest outdoor news, hunting and fishing tips - plus exclusive offers, giveaways and more!

    SIGN UP
    Instagram Facebook-f X-twitter Tiktok Youtube
    Shopping
    • Military & First Responders Discount
    • Shipping
    • Returns
    Company
    • About Us
    • FAQs
    • Contact Us
    Legal
    • Affiliate Disclosure
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
    • F&S Music Fest Refund Info
    • Privacy and cookie settings
    Partners
    • Nashville Race Weekend Sweepstakes
    • Amazon
    • Best Home Furnishings
    • F&S x Gokey Collection
    • Moultrie
    • Old Wood Signs
    • Sugarlands Distilling Co.
    • Tractor Supply Co.
    • Yuengling
    • WearSPF
    • Whiskey JYPSI
    • Field & Stream Lodge Co.
    Disclaimers

    Articles may contain affiliate links that enable us to share in the revenue of any purchases made.
    Registration on or use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Service.

    © 2026 Field & Stream All rights reserved.

    • Sitemap

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.