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General Discussion => LEARNING TO TURKEY HUNT => Topic started by: Flounder on April 14, 2017, 05:26:44 PM

Title: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Flounder on April 14, 2017, 05:26:44 PM
Went this morning and thought about this for beginners.
I keep a small set of clippers in my fanny pack and almost always use them to trim small branches out of my way. No noise,very quiet and helps fine tune my setups when time allows.
I know this is something else to carry but I don't leave home without them. You can turn an ok setup into a good one.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: SFCSNOW on April 14, 2017, 06:15:22 PM
Yep. I also take advantage of some of the foliage I may trim and use it for cover out front.  Nothing better than a few well placed palmetto fronds to hide small movements. Usually use two about three feet in front of me. Close enough for overlapping coverage. Clear shot between them or swing to either side. Pruners go with me to the woods every trip. Scouting, hunting, checking cams...
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: outdoors on April 14, 2017, 07:03:28 PM
HEY CLIPPERS IS PART OF MY LUGGAGE WHEN I Go IN THE WOODS   :icon_thumright: :icon_thumright:
Title: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: TauntoHawk on April 22, 2017, 10:27:03 PM
I just told my father that besides the shotgun and a mouth call the next piece of gear I'd take is a pair of clippers

Very useful

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Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: renegade19 on April 23, 2017, 10:37:35 PM
Me too.  Sometimes, I trade them out for a folding saw but they're for sure quieter and usually quicker.
Title: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Ericbrooks on April 23, 2017, 11:07:04 PM
Yep! I carry my small fiskers as well. Great advice


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Title: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Tennessee Lead on April 23, 2017, 11:33:00 PM
My EZ KUTS are a great piece of equipment to have in the vest. I've used them on each hunt


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Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Geechie on April 24, 2017, 09:28:00 AM
My pair of clippers is one of the most used tools in my vest. From cutting to make quick blind material or to clear shooting lanes. Happens all the time,  I sit down and one or two branches bother me until I cut them.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Sevenyearsandcounting on April 28, 2017, 08:05:35 PM
My dad stuffed a heavy duty pair of clippers in my vest for clearing brush and if lucky enough cutting tags and turkey bone.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: g8rvet on May 02, 2017, 04:39:31 PM
Gun, shells, face mask, thermacell and trimmers are must takes on every trip for me.

I use them more than I use my gun!  I wish it were not true.  :-[
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: TRG3 on May 11, 2017, 04:16:03 PM
I agree with others that they do add a little more weight to carry to the field, but then again you don't have to worry about brush obscuring you view from the location you've chosen as your set-up spot. In the three Southern Illinois seasons this spring, I used the clippers at least once in every season from clearing a shooting lane to snipping sprouts to place by my decoys to keep them from spinning in the wind. Clippers are much more handy than a saw unless you've got a 1" diameter tree to remove, etc. I suppose that you could also create a brushy blind if need be.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Natty on May 13, 2017, 09:45:34 AM
Me too. Always carry clippers with me.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: LaLongbeard on February 17, 2018, 11:08:24 AM
Gotta have the clippers. Trimming brush or adding some to breakup your outline.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: GobbleNut on February 17, 2018, 12:23:12 PM
This is definitely one of those items that you don't know how beneficial they are until you start carrying them and using them.  They make all the difference in the world in terms of making a bad or so-so set-up into a great one.  Wouldn't be without 'em.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: paboxcall on February 17, 2018, 01:41:39 PM
Agree - priceless if you need to sit down quick and make a couple adjustments.

I use these all day long sometimes. If hunting a location with heavy thorns and briar bushes, having them handy allows you to cut your way through. Countless times chasing birds down over side hills I end up swallowed up in thorn bushes and need to cut my way through or out.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Sir-diealot on February 18, 2018, 10:25:10 PM
I hunt state land a lot and that is a definite no no here in N.Y. They can fine you big time for it if they choose to and in N.Y. they pretty much always do. You can't even break a twig off, if there is even a hint of green leaf on the entire branch or you will get fined. Just something to think about. I do use them on private land though.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Marc on March 02, 2018, 12:06:23 AM
Quote from: g8rvet on May 02, 2017, 04:39:31 PM
Gun, shells, face mask, thermacell and trimmers are must takes on every trip for me.

I use them more than I use my gun!  I wish it were not true.  :-[

Good list...  But toilette paper makes it on mine as well.  I look at toilette paper as I do a gun for self-defense...  I would rather have it and not need it, than need it and not have it...
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: GobbleNut on March 03, 2018, 11:25:51 AM
Quote from: Sir-diealot on February 18, 2018, 10:25:10 PM
I hunt state land a lot and that is a definite no no here in N.Y. They can fine you big time for it if they choose to and in N.Y. they pretty much always do. You can't even break a twig off, if there is even a hint of green leaf on the entire branch or you will get fined. Just something to think about. I do use them on private land though.

That is both interesting,...and silly.  First of all, vegetation everywhere is always growing,...and then dying.  The idea that a hunter cutting a few branches off to improve a set-up is somehow affecting the landscape is absurd.  Secondly, people walking around in the woods break off as many living branches,...or crush vegetation,...as much or more than any clipper-bearing hunter.  Thirdly, that is one of those laws that is fundamentally unenforceable,...unless the agent actually witnessed somebody doing it. 

Personally, unless somebody could actually demonstrate to me that clipping a few twigs was causing any harm, I would ignore that rule.  It is kind of like the rules in some places that say you can't "relieve yourself" in the woods without finding a "facility".  Fat chance that is going to happen,...at least for this old boy!
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Sir-diealot on March 03, 2018, 08:22:33 PM
Quote from: GobbleNut on March 03, 2018, 11:25:51 AM
Quote from: Sir-diealot on February 18, 2018, 10:25:10 PM
I hunt state land a lot and that is a definite no no here in N.Y. They can fine you big time for it if they choose to and in N.Y. they pretty much always do. You can't even break a twig off, if there is even a hint of green leaf on the entire branch or you will get fined. Just something to think about. I do use them on private land though.

That is both interesting,...and silly.  First of all, vegetation everywhere is always growing,...and then dying.  The idea that a hunter cutting a few branches off to improve a set-up is somehow affecting the landscape is absurd.  Secondly, people walking around in the woods break off as many living branches,...or crush vegetation,...as much or more than any clipper-bearing hunter.  Thirdly, that is one of those laws that is fundamentally unenforceable,...unless the agent actually witnessed somebody doing it. 

Personally, unless somebody could actually demonstrate to me that clipping a few twigs was causing any harm, I would ignore that rule.  It is kind of like the rules in some places that say you can't "relieve yourself" in the woods without finding a "facility".  Fat chance that is going to happen,...at least for this old boy!
I agree it seems stupid but it does happen and I can understand why they don't want people doing it, kinda why they don't want one person cutting down a tree for CHRISTmas, if one does it soon there will be nothing left theory. The rules states "Unauthorized cutting of live trees or new trail building is prohibited." https://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/44115.html There have been people fined for it. I took some kids to their hunters training course this past fall and the DEC officer (Department of Environmental Conservation Officer) even spoke on it as a matter of fact. He is the one said if it has any green left on it at all even if down to leave it alone.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: CtRider on March 03, 2018, 08:32:07 PM
Learned this tip from mentor in the beginning and love my Fiskar ratchet pruners
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: TauntoHawk on March 06, 2018, 12:15:41 PM
Thanks for reminding me I need a new pair

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Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Twowithone on March 06, 2018, 08:30:49 PM
I carry them. Here in Pa. you can get caught up in Multiflora Rose its a killer for sure itll rip your camo up pretty good. :firefighter:
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: dejake on March 07, 2018, 03:43:25 AM
Am I the only one that already has their spots cleared and ready to go?
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: paboxcall on March 07, 2018, 11:14:16 AM
Quote from: dejake on March 07, 2018, 03:43:25 AM
Am I the only one that already has their spots cleared and ready to go?

Big woods hunters don't have "spots." One large tracks of public ground, not unusual to trek several miles each way uncharted and unseen chasing a gobbling turkey.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: dejake on March 08, 2018, 03:27:58 AM
One tract I hunt is 2,500 acres, and the same areas produce year after year.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: CtRider on March 08, 2018, 06:45:18 AM
Public land to me means having to adjust when other hunters are nearby. Also not leaving a prime spot ready for someone else to move into.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: g8rvet on March 08, 2018, 02:19:20 PM
Quote from: dejake on March 07, 2018, 03:43:25 AM
Am I the only one that already has their spots cleared and ready to go?

Not at all.  I hunt two small tracts and have areas that are pre brushed every year.  If a bird gobbles nearby, I have a seat.  One of those spots I have hunted for probably 15 years and have killed a bunch of gobblers.  It looks out over a field and is impossible to get to if they are not on the limb without a big risk of spooking them. So I often start there and move along as needed.  Have sat down many times and called one off the nearby roost without ever moving.  It works, I don't spook birds off the small tract (350 acres). 

At my even smaller lease, we have several pre brushed blinds we sit down in prior to flydown. head in when it is pitch black and start there.  Then move accordingly.  Works very well and saves us walking past roosted birds that have not yet gobbled and messing up one of the other hunters on the lease (all family).  Works for us.

In the WMA I hunt, never.  If I do brush out a spot for a late morning sit (when I have heard no gobbles but know a bird uses the area), I am always very careful to make sure I knock it down. No free intel.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: kiltman on March 15, 2018, 11:35:52 AM
 I also always carry hand clippers.  I actually have two of them.  One is always in my turkey vest and the other is with my deer hunting equipment.  It's amazing how great a spot looks when standing up. Then you sit down and pow!  weeds everywhere.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: BTH on March 28, 2018, 03:41:18 PM
Best extra weight you can carry in a vest imo are lightweight ratchet clippers.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Gobble! on April 06, 2018, 09:20:40 AM
Definitely something good to have. Can be used to make a makeshift blind as well.
Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: eddie234 on April 06, 2018, 09:35:46 AM
I always have my clippers plus a small foldable saw. Some branches are just a little to thick from the clippers


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Title: Re: Setting up & Clippers
Post by: Gobbler428 on April 29, 2018, 08:13:47 AM
I carry both clippers and a small folding saw. They both get used quite a bit and its surprising how fast you can build a small blind when you need to. I would not go in the woods without either.