Fly My Way Outfitters of Waynesboro will host their second annual Duck Scramble Saturday October 3rd. The event will test the shooting skills of 25 three man teams, with the First Place Team receiving three Benelli 12 gauge automatic shotguns!
Each team will have a chance to score on 27 ducks during a single round for their top score. The overall top score after one round will determine the champions. In case of a tie at the top, there will be a skeet shoot off between those teams around 5 p.m.
All participants will rotate and shoot from the same blind, with the teams being flighted in order of entry fee received. The morning participants will be furnished breakfast and drinks, while the afternoon hunters will be offered barbecue.
Transportation to and from the shooting blinds will be provided.
All teams must furnish their own guns, 12 or 20 gauge only, along with steel shot of any size. In addition to testing the skills of the hunters, the event also affords hunters and trainers a chance to bring their retrievers for a practice as well.
The teams will also rotate to a back up blind and have an opportunity to shoot back up for the next team after their scoring round is finished, before returning to the breakfast lodge. All ducks harvested will become the property of the responsible shooters.
For more information on the duck scramble, contact David or Patton Stanley at 601-410-8560 as only a limited amount of slots remain open. Or visit them online at www.flymywayoutfitters.com.
Outdoors
Fly My Way Outfitters Duck Scramble
- Outdoors
-
-
Foy on Turkey hunting and S.H.A.R.E.
- The Leaf
- Squirrel hunting memories
- The big one at last
-
How to hunt and take Lauderdale County’s biggest buck
-
Final day monster bucks
- Unforgettable Jesse Burroughs
- Roberson scores on trophy buck
-
Successful Elk hunt?
We knew going in that the odds were against us. An elk every five years of hunting is the average. Even hunting for the more plentiful cows in the great herds of the mountains, our chances were not much better than the cow/bull average. Throw in the fact that our hunt followed the rut by a month when the November storms move the elk, slow our pace with deep snows and freezing winds, and we had a deck stacked against us that included the handicap of hunting an area completely unfamiliar, except for maps. My nephew, Rob and I were in for a challenge.
-
Photos of The Week
- More Outdoors Headlines
-





