Kent wildfowlers

grandad of the woods

Well-Known Member
I'm just curious what people think been looking at possibly joining just wounded if there are any members on here that have any experience

.What's it like booking days
.Is there much of a wait
.is it worth the money
.any silly catches I should know about

Thanks for any advice in advance
 
I had to pay a non refundable joining fee back in the 1990s. Then managed a few days out near Whitstable on the shore but never got to involve further with them. I did go to one AGM but if they do day bookings I would doubt as they seemed very secretive to me. I think you also have to be a BASC member.
 
I had to pay a non refundable joining fee back in the 1990s. Then managed a few days out near Whitstable on the shore but never got to involve further with them. I did go to one AGM but if they do day bookings I would doubt as they seemed very secretive to me. I think you also have to be a BASC member.

As far as I, aware they dropped out as a BASC affiliated club a few years ago.
 
I'm just curious what people think been looking at possibly joining just wounded if there are any members on here that have any experience

.What's it like booking days
.Is there much of a wait
.is it worth the money
.any silly catches I should know about

Thanks for any advice in advance
What an Essex based wildfowler thinks of Kent Wildfowlers is this.
Stay in Kent.
Also having a dog to pick up fallen wildfowl is important for lots of reasons.
When a lung shot duck carries on then drops over a full creek ;)
 
What an Essex based wildfowler thinks of Kent Wildfowlers is this.
Stay in Kent.
Also having a dog to pick up fallen wildfowl is important for lots of reasons.
When a lung shot duck carries on then drops over a full creek ;)


They do not make friends where ever they go. Not at all popular in Norfolk.
 
I was a member for seven consecutive seasons together with a group of friends, until the 2012-2013 season I think. We joined because it seemed to offer great shooting opportunities within reach of London at an affordable cost, and just because we all wanted to get into wildfowling. It did not disappoint. Yes you have to book in advance and do bag returns, even back then it was mostly online, I suspect you can do all of it online now. But then it's like any mostly volunteer organisation: you need to put in to get the best from it. There were a lot of blanks, a lot of very short nights, a lot of frustrating outings. We were severely limited by having no dogs so we'd have to pass on shooting opportunities (and they were rare). Also we had to plan our trips in advance looking for overlaps in our personal availability, suitable tides, moonlight, and wildfowl don't care about our diaries. Also, your hunting territory is essentially the sky and the North Sea and you need to somehow be within 40m of a duck in that vast landscape, then not miss when it happens.

There are also some inland marshes that are easier, some roughshooting leases in woods which is where I realised that since I was stalking woodcock and rabbits on my own anyway and kept coming across deer, I may as well do that instead.

The reality is that when you're not local, you can't make the best if the natural opportunities. But I don't regret those times at all. One of my friends recently moved to a village in Gloucestershire. We went for a walk this weekend and came across a marsh with the local club's sign. It's taken a decade, children etc, but now it turns out the marsh is ten minutes walk from his house, he'll be back out there ASAP, which wouldn't have happened without the KWCA experience.
 
I was a member for seven consecutive seasons together with a group of friends, until the 2012-2013 season I think. We joined because it seemed to offer great shooting opportunities within reach of London at an affordable cost, and just because we all wanted to get into wildfowling. It did not disappoint. Yes you have to book in advance and do bag returns, even back then it was mostly online, I suspect you can do all of it online now. But then it's like any mostly volunteer organisation: you need to put in to get the best from it. There were a lot of blanks, a lot of very short nights, a lot of frustrating outings. We were severely limited by having no dogs so we'd have to pass on shooting opportunities (and they were rare). Also we had to plan our trips in advance looking for overlaps in our personal availability, suitable tides, moonlight, and wildfowl don't care about our diaries. Also, your hunting territory is essentially the sky and the North Sea and you need to somehow be within 40m of a duck in that vast landscape, then not miss when it happens.

There are also some inland marshes that are easier, some roughshooting leases in woods which is where I realised that since I was stalking woodcock and rabbits on my own anyway and kept coming across deer, I may as well do that instead.

The reality is that when you're not local, you can't make the best if the natural opportunities. But I don't regret those times at all. One of my friends recently moved to a village in Gloucestershire. We went for a walk this weekend and came across a marsh with the local club's sign. It's taken a decade, children etc, but now it turns out the marsh is ten minutes walk from his house, he'll be back out there ASAP, which wouldn't have happened without the KWCA experience.
The 3 things stand out from my interview with an Essex Wildfowling club I joined (and still with)
Have you a working dog (yes)
Have you a steel proofed shotgun (yes)
How long have you been shooting ( at the time 40 years) ;)
 
I was a member of KWCA for a couple of years and my experience with them was mostly positive. Only issue it’s overpopulated hence some of the lands, especially easy to reach spots are hammered on every day. You need a little bit experience with their lands other than just looking at the their maps on paper to find out unbeaten spots where most people don’t and can’t get to. In my times they had many lands from Kent to Norfolk I am sure that there should be more now.
Once you are full member you are allowed to go any land that’s allowed to shoot. They have a website where you do all bookings.
 
If you want coastal wildfowling in Kent, a big county, then KWCA is the only option as far as I know. A huge contrast with where I live close to the Wash, with half a dozen clubs within an hour's drive. Because it is a big club, they need members and increased membership funds an ongoing land acquisition policy. The latter has, outwith Kent, produced a fair bit of ill feeling but that is a matter for another day. I would suggest you get on the phone to the secretary to see if the club offers what you want. It will probably be possible to visit one or two sites before committing. As a long serving official of another major club I would stress that we all want new members to stay, to commit, and learn the craft. It can become very addictive.
 
Back
Top