Turkey hunting forum for turkey hunting tips

General Discussion => Turkey Hunting Tips ,Strategies & Methods => Topic started by: shaman on March 20, 2018, 09:12:53 AM

Title: Turkey Log
Post by: shaman on March 20, 2018, 09:12:53 AM
Years ago, I got turned onto the idea of a Turkey Log.  Most guys back then were using index cards.  I think at one point, you could buy a pack of pre-printed ones.  I didn't.  It just seemed like such a bleeding waste of time.  Of course I was going to remember every turkey I killed! 

After closing in on 40 years at it, and close to hitting 60, I realized things were beginning to slip away.  Yeah, I remember every turkey, but sometimes the exact details are starting to get jumbled.  I had already started a deer hunting log back in the early 90's. However, that got lost in the divorce.

About 10 years ago, I decided to recreate my deer hunting log. What spurred the idea was finding WUnderground.com had an historical section that showed local conditions by hour for just about anywhere I'd ever hunted. All I needed was the date of each kill, and my memory could provide some basic facts. 

I used the same tricks to synthesize my turkey log.  Kentucky has a Telecheck history, so all I had to do was go into my Telecheck profile and download a record of every turkey I've checked in. That gave me the date of the kill.  I have been fairly good at keeping a record of my turkey kills on my weblog, so I had stats like weight, beard length, etc.  and when I shot the bird.  The results were a pretty good inventory of my turkey hunting.

Some things I found surprising:

    1)  I have only bagged one gobbler in May.  It makes sense. Most years, I'm tagged out, and though I've done a lot of hunting in May, it's usually been as a caller for my sons or my buddies
    2)  I've now taken more birds at Flydown as opposed to the afternoon.  Mid-Morning is still my most productive time, but I now  average one bird pitching down to me off the roost per season.
   3)  I've killed more mature gobblers than jakes. I started eschewing jakes about a decade ago.
    4) My average successful shot is 20.53 yards. That doesn't count the number of times I've missed a bird at 5 yards.  If you count those, I'm at 17 yards for an average shot.
    5) Half of my birds are taken on Saturdays. I've only taken 2 birds on a Friday.  I've only taken 1 bird on a Sunday.
    6) If I miss a bird, the chances of not filling all my  tags that season goes up dramatically.
    7) If I take a bird on The Opener, I usually fill both my tags. The one exception was 2011, where I developed pneumonia on the The Opener and had to go back to town by mid-week.

Here's some more details:
 A Turkey Hunter Takes a Fearless Inventory (http://genesis9.angzva.com/?p=6186)
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: LaLongbeard on March 20, 2018, 09:49:57 AM
Reminds me I need to get a fireproof safe big enough to fit all my hunting notebooks into. I've got every deer and Turkey hunt written down,doesn't  take but a few min to write each hunts details but would take forever to try and rewrite them. The notes can be helpful especially if you hunt the same property you will notice trends that will help your hunting plus it's nice to be able to read the exact details of a hunt that took place 20 or more years ago without having to rely solely on your memory. Same for pictures like everyone else I have a ton of pics on my phone but I get a picture printed out of all the kills to go in a book with all the old pre phone pics.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: shaman on March 20, 2018, 10:03:11 AM
Better yet, I'd scan the books into PDF form and put them out on the cloud somewhere.  Google, Dropbox-- there's a bunch of places that will give you several GB's for free.  I've currently got all my photos backed up to Amazon-- free service with a Prime Membership.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: GobbleNut on March 20, 2018, 10:24:19 AM
...I thought you were going to talk about a tree... :toothy12:
When I first started turkey hunting, I would write the story about every bird I killed.  After about ten years of doing that, I stopped.  Now I wish I hadn't.  At this stage of life, it would be wonderful to be able to go back and read about those hunts from thirty or forty years ago.  I still remember the "generalities", but the details have faded. 
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: MK M GOBL on March 20, 2018, 10:42:40 AM
I have kept a turkey log for the last 28 years, I won't say I have exact details of every hunt but I kept up on the year and things I have done, Learn to Hunts, Mentor programs and yes my successes!  Places I have been and people I have met and such. I have a separate file of stories I have written about hunts and things I have done as well. I'll keep it going for as long as I can :)

MK M GOBL
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: falltoms on March 20, 2018, 02:09:31 PM
I've kept a log all my turkey hunting career. One thing I started about 10 years ago, was keeping track of the time spent on each individual gobbler. If I killed the gobbler I would write down how long it took to work him in gun range, from first contact to the trigger pull. My average is 1 hour and 10 minutes. I keep this number in mind while working a bird. My point is, this helps with patience, and prepares my mind to stick with the bird as long as it takes.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: 1iagobblergetter on March 20, 2018, 04:24:52 PM
My wife wanted me to start a journal years ago on all of my hunts and I never did. I wish I would have listened. I could see where it would be useful...
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: Turkeyman on March 20, 2018, 05:02:53 PM
I used to have a deer and turkey log but quit on them some years ago. What I plan to do now is video hunts...both turkey and bow hunts for deer. I'll edit them on the PC with a decent editing software, add captions and audio. I think these will be much more enjoyable to see as time goes on than read a logbook when my hunting days wane. These will be primarily, if not exclusively, for me to enjoy. I bought a Tactacam 4.0 recently but returned it...not entirely satisfied. I'll buy the Tactacam 5.0 when it comes out this fall...I think it will meet my expectations.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: fallhnt on March 21, 2018, 09:20:40 PM
Turkey log...(https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20180322/e06a930ec96d88864093a5fc393a69b8.jpg)

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Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: wade on March 22, 2018, 06:12:59 AM
I write stories about my hunts all the time. A few years back a local paper published a story I wrote about a hunt where I helped a kid kill a longbeard. That turned into me doing a weekly column in the paper. Sometimes I look back to make sure I'm not just repeating something I wrote before and end up reliving old hunts. As we get older reliving old hunts gets more important. I'd recommend everybody keep some kind of log.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: kjnengr on March 26, 2018, 10:45:03 AM
Thanks guys for the motivation to start this up.  I will start my turkey log this year. 

What info do you find important to jot down in your log?
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: TauntoHawk on March 26, 2018, 11:30:10 AM
I wish I would have started this from the start but I will start this year.. I'm only 30 and the hunts are starting to blur together now that I hunt at least 3 states a spring it gets even harder by the end of the season I can't even match beard and spurs up

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Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: guesswho on March 28, 2018, 07:02:23 PM
I have a hard time remembering last years hunts.  I wish I had kept a written account from day one.  I can remember a lot of those hunts from 50 plus years ago, but I'm sure I'm probably missing some hunts and some details.  And I'm sure my memory has enchanted some of the details over time.   I probably should have kept two journals, one fiction, and one enhanced version.   
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: Jrkimbrough on November 08, 2018, 04:00:54 PM
This past year I started a photo book and logged a pic or two of each bird I killed and then wrote date, time and a short hunt story on an index card.  Fun to look back and relive those hunts through the pictures and stories.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: Muzzy61 on November 21, 2018, 01:26:59 PM
Great idea. I wish i had keep a journal.
I tournament bass fished for about 25 years and keep a journal of all my fishing during that time. I go back and look at if from time to time and memories come back to me.

Guess it's not to late to start one for turkeys.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: Gobble! on December 17, 2018, 02:38:30 PM
My memory is trash. After about my 5th season I decided to try to keep a log and had a really hard time remembering how I killed the first 5 years worth of birds. I just keep a simple excel spread sheet with a few lines on how the hunt played out. Don't worry about dates or anything weather related. Cool to have.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: mmorgan9812 on December 17, 2018, 05:35:48 PM
Trying to come up with some sort of Excel sheet now. I really like some of the categories you have listed
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: Sir-diealot on December 17, 2018, 05:44:02 PM
I bought a pad of paper to put in the backpack a month or so ago for doing this.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: davisd9 on December 17, 2018, 08:20:26 PM
I have a photo album I bought that has lines to write. I have every kill with details. I figure when I am old I can relive it or maybe my boys will enjoy it when I am gone across the Jordan.


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Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: Happy on December 18, 2018, 06:29:44 AM
I caveman it and just scratch stick figures on boulders for those in future years to puzzle over. It takes an artists touch to depict blinds,decoys and tss shot over a food plot while wearing a hecs suite. Gotta let the future know how real hunting was done.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: GobbleNut on December 19, 2018, 08:18:16 AM
Quote from: Happy on December 18, 2018, 06:29:44 AM
I caveman it and just scratch stick figures on boulders for those in future years to puzzle over. It takes an artists touch to depict blinds,decoys and tss shot over a food plot while wearing a hecs suite. Gotta let the future know how real hunting was done.

:TooFunny:  That was harsh,...you troublemaker!
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: Happy on December 19, 2018, 08:44:01 AM
Not really, 100 years from now that will be considered old school turkey hunting. If we manage to exist that long anyways.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: waysouth on March 08, 2019, 10:39:38 AM
This is a great idea. I wish I had kept logs of all my hunts, I think it might be something nice for my son to read when I am gone.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: TrackeySauresRex on March 08, 2019, 11:36:03 AM
Quote from: Happy on December 18, 2018, 06:29:44 AM
I caveman it and just scratch stick figures on boulders for those in future years to puzzle over. It takes an artists touch to depict blinds,decoys and tss shot over a food plot while wearing a hecs suite. Gotta let the future know how real hunting was done.

Too funny!  :TooFunny:
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: shaman on March 10, 2019, 08:24:34 AM
I'm glad y'all like idea. 

Here's another thing I learned from my log:

First off, remember that I have a favorite spot, called The Honey Hole.  It's produced gobs of gobs over the past two decades.  Second, you have to understand that The Honey Hole ceased to be a few years ago. I'd been sitting with my back to a big old dead oak tree, and it fell over a few years ago.  I moved down to the next big Oak on the tree line, but  it hasn't been the same.  I'm still able to kill turkeys, but it was. . . I dunno. . . different.

Looking over the log helped me figure out the difference, and the difference will possibly be a lesson for y'all.

At Honey Hole #1, I was kind of stuck back in the weeds.  In bright sunlight, I was in shadow.   Turkeys have a hard time seeing into deep shadow, so I was practically invisible to them when I had my back to the tree.  On cloudy days, I was always getting busted.

At Honey Hole #2, I'm sitting up a bit from the bushes.  It's all the same tree line, but the big oak's roots has raised the ground around it.  I put up a 2' high burlap screen around me, but I noticed after the second year, the gobs were avoiding me on sunny days.  I snapped a pic mid-season and caught the sun shining through.  It was almost like there was no blind at all on the west side of the the blind. 

Sure enough, when I looked at my log, it confirmed  what I thought.  At Honey Hole #1, my successes were mostly late morning and days when the sun was casting a shadow.  At Honey Hole #2, the bulk of my shots have been on cloudy days.

I've resolved to fix the problem.   I'll start off by putting landscape fabric behind the burlap.  That way, my shadow won't show up on the burlap.    Also, I need to figure out a way to even tually get back to Honey Hole #1.  Right now it has this big rotting trunk laying in a most inopportune spot.  Once it fully rots out, which won't be long, I think I'm going to build a faux-stump either out of wood or stone so I have something to rest my back against.



Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: GobbleNut on March 10, 2019, 10:31:32 AM
Don't get me wrong,...I think keeping a log or "written history" of hunts is a great idea.  I also think it can go from a source of reliving hunts to just being "anal".   ;D

I suppose part of that might be due to having such a limited area to hunt.  Honestly, I would feel like a caged animal if I only had 200 acres to hunt.  I would constantly be looking for other places to go,...which brings me to my point.  Hunting hundreds of thousand of acres of public land, I rarely hunt the same place on a regular basis,...and that is by choice.

My "bag", if you will, is to look over maps/Google, choose a spot that I think should hold birds, and then go there and find out.  I have killed birds in literally dozens of locations within the National Forests I hunt.  My "logs" are the maps of those areas, which I can pull out, look at, and say "Oh yeah, I remember the bird I killed in this spot",...and then pretty well relive the hunt in my memory.  The years they happened and the conditions are admittedly pretty foggy anymore after 50+ years,...but I can generally remember every hunt and how it played out.

Having said that, every year I contemplate taking the time to write the story of those hunts down.  Never end up doing it anymore,...I've just become a lazy old fart, I suppose.... :angel9:
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: G squared 23 on March 12, 2019, 10:35:11 PM
 I use the Google Docs app on my phone.  I can write as little or as much as I want, and it automatically saves.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: unclee on March 13, 2019, 09:40:43 AM
Quote from: fallhnt on March 21, 2018, 09:20:40 PM
Turkey log...(https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20180322/e06a930ec96d88864093a5fc393a69b8.jpg)

Sent from my SM-G930V using Tapatalk

Now thats funny... :turkey2:
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: ssramage on March 13, 2019, 09:45:03 AM
Great idea. I don't keep one per say, but I do have a smaller forum that I frequent and every one of my kills is documented in detail on there. I should probably start a handwritten journal as well. My boys may want it for nostalgia one day to read about how often their dad got whipped by a bird.
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: Illini Tom on March 14, 2019, 11:00:50 AM
i started turkey hunting in 1991 and my girlfriend now wife bought me a journal for christmas that year.
i have a log, not really a story, about every bird i've shot. i note where i was hunting, what season (we have 1 thru 5), time of day, call(s) used, how far the shot was, the turkey's stats (beard and spur length and weight), a note about the weather and a brief recap of the hunt.
also have included some memorable hunts that didnt result in a bird
glad i did it and i read through it a few times a year
Title: Re: Turkey Log
Post by: mudbug_4 on March 14, 2019, 02:32:11 PM
Great idea. I don't think I can put together all of my turkey (or deer) harvests from over the years but I can probably get most of them documented. I will take this as advice so I can start a log for my kids, though! Thanks!