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Spring Rape


old'un
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A superb crop to decoy over around May time, the birds go for the sparse bits around the headlands just like Winter rape, but the big difference is that they don't turn up in flocks of 500 plus birds, more in a steady stream all day long, which can make for some good shooting.

 

Not much grown around these parts though, most farmers have switched to peas.

 

Cat.

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A good many years ago, a farmer on one of my permissions put spring rape in on a large field backing onto a pig slurry, but it never took. Came up about three inches and that was it with great bare patches.

 

Shot it the first week and downed 140+. Shot it the second week with a mate and bagged 130+. On this occasion I had my flatcoat with me, now long since departed. I sent the dog for a bird dropped behind, which she dutifully retrieved and then disappeared. I assumed that she had gone for another bird. My mate who always dressed the part with expensive, well pressed Dak slacks, sweater and shirt, all of a sudden kangarooed over the front of the net. I wondered what the hell he was doing but then saw the flatcoat coming into the hide from behind totally coated in slurry. Laugh! Oh yes I laughed, until the dog shook itself. Not quite so funny then. Anyway, shot the field the third week and dropped 120+. Turned up the fourth week to find it ploughed in. Gutted! Rarely see spring rape nowadays.

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A good many years ago, a farmer on one of my permissions put spring rape in on a large field backing onto a pig slurry, but it never took. Came up about three inches and that was it with great bare patches.

 

Shot it the first week and downed 140+. Shot it the second week with a mate and bagged 130+. On this occasion I had my flatcoat with me, now long since departed. I sent the dog for a bird dropped behind, which she dutifully retrieved and then disappeared. I assumed that she had gone for another bird. My mate who always dressed the part with expensive, well pressed Dak slacks, sweater and shirt, all of a sudden kangarooed over the front of the net. I wondered what the hell he was doing but then saw the flatcoat coming into the hide from behind totally coated in slurry. Laugh! Oh yes I laughed, until the dog shook itself. Not quite so funny then. Anyway, shot the field the third week and dropped 120+. Turned up the fourth week to find it ploughed in. Gutted! Rarely see spring rape nowadays.

some good memories there I bet, I'd e happy with 5 on this osr the way its going same every year.
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Another reason why Spring Rape is not that popular is that it's a very fickle crop to grow, if we have a dry Spring / early Summer it can be very stunted and will be hammered even harder by the Woodies, whereas if we have a wet Spring / early Summer then it can grow very well and be too long for the birds to get on very quickly after sowing.

 

A bit of a roulette crop..?

 

Cat.

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peas are a superb substitute for spring rape though, if they get left as the harvesting team goes past for what ever reason you get another go at them, a 70 acre field near me got ripe too quick a few years back and the harvesters passed by, I shot some big bags on there, even after they had been ploughed in there were peas everywhere, pigeons came from miles

 

Mikee

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