Guest Info & FAQs.
What to know before your Klamath Basin waterfowl hunt.
The essentials.
Hunt Area & Licensing
Because we hunt both California and Oregon properties, guests are informed ahead of time where the hunt will take place and which licenses, stamps, or waterfowl validations are needed for that specific hunt. We always prioritize hunting where the birds are actively working.
Group Size & Format
$250 per hunter, per day. Minimum group size is 3 hunters and maximum is 10. All hunts are day hunts. Small-to-medium groups keep the experience personal.
What To Bring
Your state waterfowl license and required stamps, a 12 or 20 gauge with non-toxic shot, waders, and warm layers. We provide the blinds, decoy spreads, calling, and guiding.
Before you book.
Where do you hunt?
Across the Klamath Basin in both Northern California and Southern Oregon. We hunt private agricultural ground and chase wherever the birds are actively feeding and holding.
Do you hunt California or Oregon?
Both. Depending on bird activity, a hunt may take place in either state. We'll let you know ahead of time where the hunt will occur and what licensing is required.
What species can I expect?
In the fall: Canada geese, specklebellies, snows, mallards, wigeon, gadwall, and pintail. In the spring: specklebelly and snow geese, with opportunistic ducks.
What's the group size and pricing?
$250 per hunter, per day. Minimum 3 hunters, maximum 10. Day hunts only.
What kind of setups do you hunt?
Primarily dry grain and corn fields, with flooded agricultural fields and water-edge hunts as conditions allow. We hunt from A-frame and layout blinds.
Is there a chance at banded birds?
Yes. The Klamath Basin offers a strong chance at recovering banded birds each season thanks to extensive banding efforts across California refuges and areas north of the basin.
Do you offer spring hunts?
Yes — spring specklebelly and snow goose hunts run January through March. See our Spring Goose hunt page for details.