If on your next duck shoot, you should spot a giant bird three foot long, swimming along at 10 knots – don’t shoot, it could set you back $1,250: the Daily Mail’s America column reports that technology has rendered Rover redundant and come up with a terrifying decoy that weighs 15 lbs and not only […]
If on your next duck shoot, you should spot a giant bird three foot long, swimming along at 10 knots – don’t shoot, it could set you back $1,250: the Daily Mail’s America column reports that technology has rendered Rover redundant and come up with a terrifying decoy that weighs 15 lbs and not only swims around in unducklike haste, but is also able to clasp two mallards, one for each barrel, in a pair of fiendish four-fingered claws mounted at the front, and bring them ashore under radio control; it sounds too outrageous to fool even the daffiest duck, but is sure to prove an irresistible magnet for radio controlled model aircraft.