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 / How to Find and Hunt Ducks On Moving Water
Waterfowl Hunting

How to Find and Hunt Ducks On Moving Water

M.D. JohnsonBy M.D. JohnsonNovember 26, 2025

FIELD & STREAM NEWSLETTERS

ALL F&S NEWSLETTERS

Sure, I like hunting ducks over still water as much as the next guy. I’m always ready to jump-shoot a farm pond, crouch in the cattails at the edge of a beaver swamp, or camp in a boat blind, heater and hot breakfast included. But what I really like—more love with a passion—is hunting ducks over moving water. 

Creeks, streams, rivers, or any kind of water with current are all good places to ambush waterfowl—the smaller, and shallower, the better in my mind. I’ll take a warm-water slough, a tiny tributary, or a small tidal marsh creek over a still-water pond any day. 

What’s so special about ducks and moving water? To me, it’s the intimacy of hunting over just a little bit of water. Sometimes you’re on nothing more than a puddle; that is, a puddle with current. You make an impromptu blind in a small stand of willows, watch a big ‘ole beaver come by to check out the intruder in his watery realm, and watch your decoys swim back and forth in the flow, making them look all the part of real live ducks. 

Group of 4 American Black Duck on the water in a riparian forest.

How to Find Puddle Ducks on Small Creeks, Rivers, and Streams

The initial challenge to hunting moving water, be it a jump-across creek or the Missouri River, is first finding the birds. Unlike on a shallow-water marsh that will see duck activity here and there, moving water will have more specific pockets where the birds will be. Ducks usually don’t sit randomly on a stream, river, or tidally-influenced wetland. They’re where you find them for a reason. Often, that reason isn’t so much food (though that can indeed be a variable in the overall equation) but rather comfort.

Ducks, like most wild critters, depend on and exist thanks to energy efficiency. They feed, and, best they can, conserve those calories for when they’re needed most. In a moving water scenario, like a small tributary river, the birds aren’t going to fight current constantly. It’s not energy efficient. Rather, they’ll seek out sections of calm or calmer water—a quiet eddy, a backwater, the inside of a bend, or the slack water below a sandbar or small island—effectively turning the moving water into something resembling still water. Now, add a food source like coontail or other submerged vegetation, along with dabbler-shallow water, and you’ve potentially found a honey hole.

But just how do you find such a utopia? Modern technology, e.g. Google Maps, is a great way to chart the course of a stream or smaller river. An overhead view allows you to eliminate stretches of moving water that doesn’t have potential while pinpointing others worthy of further investigation. 

High angle view of mallard duck swimming in lake,Los Gatos,California,United States,USA

But there’s no better way to scout moving water than to get on the water. I’ve often done just that in the Midwest during September, combining smallmouth fishing with squirrel hunting and some duck scouting. I look for sections of river where I see or flush birds, remembering the above cardinal rule that ducks are on a piece of moving water for a reason, not willy-nilly. I also check sandbars for things like tracks and goose poop to find possible loafing spots. Then I make notes and plan a return trip come October or November.

Find Moving Water Duck-Hunting Hotspots On Foot

While floating Iowa’s Wapsipinicon River, a tributary to the Mississippi, one October, with wood ducks, smallies, and channel ‘cats on the menu, I stopped to investigate a feeder creek. I knew the landowner on that bank, so I took a short walk upstream and was soon glad I did. Seventy-five yards from the Wapsi, a large industrious rodent had partially dammed the feeder, creating a shallow pool among the willows roughly the size of my basement. 

I bumped 30 or 40 mixed woodies, mallards, and blue-wings from the corners—activity enough to prompt my finding a quick hide on the edge next to a yellow-leafed cottonwood. Thirty minutes later, I had a six-bird limit on the water, all taken from ones, twos, and tiny groups that filtered back to their previously undiscovered refuge.

My point? This experience wasn’t an isolated instance. Such scenarios can exist coast-to-coast. Any current, regardless of how small, is worth exploring, especially on public land. Several years ago, a young friend of mine walked into the “Way Back,” as he called it, off the main river channel flowing through a very popular Iowa WMA on a hunch, only to find a glorious, albeit temporary beaver pool filled with mallards, grey ducks, woodies, and even a black duck. He and his son hunted it quite successfully until freeze-up. For private ground, use onX to find the landowner, inquire, and, if given the blessing, proceed. You just never know what you’re going to find.

Pond of water in the park with light filtering through the trees with autumn leaves, while mallards swim in groups.

How to Set Up Duck Decoys for Moving Water

In terms of frustration, setting decoys in moving water can rank right up there with trying to separate two cheap paper plates. Every year, waterfowlers across the country loses dozens of decoys when hardware breaks and knots come untied. True, decoys aren’t nearly as costly as a good duck boat or a brand new Beretta, but there’s no need replacing what doesn’t need replacing.

Moving water and current means more drag on decoys and decoy lines. Therefore, lines should be strong and of the best quality, and knots, whether tied static to the decoy keel or to hardware such as a swivel which is then fastened to the decoy, should be likewise as strong. 

The Best Knots for Rigging Duck Decoys on Moving Water

The knots I use depend upon the type of decoy cord I’m using. With nylon cord, a good, old-fashioned double clinch knot, the same knot I use when I’m fishing, holds well, and as my father is fond of saying, “does nothing but get tighter the more you pull on it.” With the popular Tangle-Free cords, however, I’ll use a circular lead crimp-lock to ensure the cord doesn’t pull free. An alternative to using the crimp-locks with the Tangle-Free cord is to double the cord and pass it through the “eye” of the decoy keel. Then pull the loop entirely over the decoy and snug it up. Tie a half-hitch in the tag end of the cord to prevent it from pulling through, and clip the excess off. It’s quick, easy, and holds surprisingly well.

How to Rig Decoys So They Swim

Here’s a trick I use when working with older decoys in current. Approximately two inches back from the eye on the decoy keel (a water keel style), drill a 1/8-1/4 inch side-to-side hole. If using weighted keels, heat the tips of an ordinary fence staple with a propane torch and push the staple into the keel, again approximately two inches behind the eye. Tying the decoy off to this modified eye makes the decoy “swim” back and forth. The lengthened leading edge of the keel acts like the lip on a crankbait. Typically, I’ll use three or four of these modified decoys per dozen.

Read Next: The Best Duck Hunting Shotguns

How to Rig Decoys For Tidal Creeks

Tidal situations spell an entirely different set of conditions for the decoy user. As waters rise, decoy cords that were fine at a foot in length become stretched to their limit. Eventually, the decoy lifts both cord and weight from the bottom, leaving the decoy to float about on its own, and, depending upon the wind and where you’re hunting, either out to Europe or China, whichever’s closer. 

Rising waters also mean that decoys must be moved constantly either in or out, depending upon whether you’re hunting the ebb or flow. To remedy this, at least in part, rig several decoys, six to a dozen is common, on one main line with weights at both ends, or, in calm conditions, with a single anchor. Decoys rigged as such can be easily moved in or out as the tide dictates.

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.