Turkey hunting forum for turkey hunting tips

General Discussion => General Forum => Topic started by: eggshell on July 30, 2023, 08:48:18 AM

Title: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: eggshell on July 30, 2023, 08:48:18 AM
Since we've hit a dead period I thought I'd start a thread that hopefully doesn't lead into some form of debate or differing opinions, but is just fun.

Post stories of the hunt, good or bad. I'm talking about the things that you didn't expect, but have stuck in your memory. It might be some character you met, it might be a very significant hunt, or it might be a simple event that made your day.

Here's an example. On a rainy Day I slept in because it was pouring. About 8:00 it let up and I decided to walk a ridge and see if I could strike a gobbler. About halfway down the ridge I walk into a small elm thicket and notice a big yellow morel. The next hour I crawled around on my knees picking morels. I stuffed my game bag and everything else I could and ended up with over 7 pounds of deliciousness. My wife even made the statement that it was better than bringing home a turkey....I'm not sure of that.  On another hunt I passed by some morels and headed to a gobbler. I killed the gobbler and returned to the mushroom patch. I called my buddies to help and by the end of the day we had picked over 25 pounds of morels and had a gobbler in the bag. This is the biggest single mushroom find of my life.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Bill on July 30, 2023, 09:29:39 AM
I lay awake at night dreaming about finding a morel patch so voluminous that I need "help" picking them.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Happy on July 30, 2023, 10:48:08 AM
About two weeks ago, I was on vacation. The wife asked if I would run out and get some milk. I did that and almost brought a 20 some year old blond in shorts and a bikini top back as well. I had just bought milk and was just sitting in my truck buckling my seat belt when she opened the passenger door and bailed in. I explained that my wife probably wouldn't be too happy if I showed up with her. It's hard being this good-looking.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Paulmyr on July 30, 2023, 12:22:12 PM
Quote from: Happy on July 30, 2023, 10:48:08 AM
About two weeks ago, I was on vacation. The wife asked if I would run out and get some milk. I did that and almost brought a 20 some year old blond in shorts and a bikini top back as well. I had just bought milk and was just sitting in my truck buckling my seat belt when she opened the passenger door and bailed in. I explained that my wife probably wouldn't be too happy if I showed up with her. It's hard being this good-looking.

I bet the gals at the strip club think your sexy too!!!!  :jackson:   :TooFunny:
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: WV Flopper on July 30, 2023, 12:40:56 PM
 Your age, experience and maturity no doubt saved you from a very expensive situation. Good job Happy!

I am probably not near as old, experienced or closely as mature. Hey, it's only money!
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Greg Massey on July 30, 2023, 12:51:50 PM
I would have spilled my MILK ... Happy ..... Your so lucky .....
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Happy on July 30, 2023, 01:02:13 PM
It was hilarious. As soon as I said that, she looked at me, and the look of embarrassment was priceless. The fellow in the truck beside me was losing it laughing. I rolled down my window and apologized, telling him I honestly wasn't trying to steal his girlfriend, but as good-looking as I was, it would be hard to blame her. He replied that it was actually his sister, and I was welcome to keep her as long as I didn't bring her back. . He also mentioned that he was telling the whole family as soon as he got back. It was pretty funny. Could have been an expensive gallon of milk, though.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: WV Flopper on July 30, 2023, 01:09:43 PM
 I have had some awesome experiences in the turkey woods. Some on my own, some with friends, and son. I will share one of my son.

We were hunting youth season in VA about 6 years ago. He was to the point it was getting hard to get him to do anything. He was addicted to video games! So I asked if he was going to participate in the hunt, bought him a license and I got the hunt scheduled with him, LOL.

I rolled him out of bed "No one would have had to roll me out at this age" and away we went. Got to our spot and started the hike in. Luckily it's a short hike.

We arrive at our listening spot and we sat down. Awesome spot and turkeys are usually there roosted so sat down to keep him from walking around. A bird starts twitting, goose, Gobbler sounds off. The Toms gobbled for 10 minutes or so and the boy says "I gotta poop". Seriously ....open woods, Toms at 100 yards roosted and he has to poop!

He gets up slides around the big oak tree and does his business, gets seated back down and the birds are still gobbling. Ok I think we are in business.

It's getting about time to start talking when the woods light up with hens, Jake's and of course the Toms. It's pretty loud turkey talk at this point.

I jump in the game and am just another voice to be heard. Turkeys start flying down and assembling about 125 yards out in the open woods. At this point I am calling pretty hard and everything else has quieted down a little. I can see 3 Toms, 6 Jake's and a slew of hens.

They start leaving perpendicular to the South of us. Toms being the last of the birds in the line. About the time they are almost out of sight I see one of the Toms stop and stare in our direction. I light him up with the loudest, nastiest talk I could muster. He turned and started our way, the other two Toms followed, the Jake's, then the hens. Must have been 25 turkeys on this string.

The turkeys are all bearing to the sewer right of way, about 50 yards out they slightly turn heading directly towards us. Immediately I am in the boys ear telling him to swing the gun to the right slowly. He is frozen! I keep telling him repeatedly " move the gun" he is froze.

These three Toms are at 35 yards and strutting in these open woods walking right to us. The gun pointed way to the left! At 30 yards one of the turkeys buggered. I calmly spoke in a normal voice and told my son, "Now or never, move the gun". Once the shooting started it was chaos. When the smoke cleared and empty hauls stopped raining down No turkeys were flopping.

I looked over at the frozen boy and said " Ain't quit like a video game is it boy."

We have had some great hunts together, I wish he would go more.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Tail Feathers on July 30, 2023, 02:24:17 PM
I've been blessed to have some incredible hunts and meet some remarkable people in my turkey travels.  But my favorite memory may well be my youngest grandson's first tom.  The bird gobbled and we worked him for quite a while, even having a passing pickup booger us up for a few minutes.
When the bird broke and was coming in, I could hear my 11 year old grandson's breaths get kind of ragged.  The tom gobbled about 20 yards away, just before he walked into sight.  I hear the boy whisper to himself "Oh my God!" and he began to tremble a bit.  The bird stepped out and the shot was true and the pure excitement from that boy was priceless.
(https://i.imgur.com/PKDok5zl.jpg)
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Tom007 on July 30, 2023, 03:40:34 PM
Here's a non-turkey experience I will share, in fact it is the best, most memorable, and life changing experience for me. April 4th, 1977 (my 17th birthday) I got my drivers license. My best friend on my Hockey team called me to ask if I could pick him and his girl friend up and drive them on a date to dinner. They both were 16, and did not yet drive. I picked up my friend, and we drove to his girl friends house. We picked her and her friend Karen up and started out. Karen sat in the front seat with me. There was an immediate attraction. The date went well, my friend and his girl lasted about a month, me and Karen are married and have been together for 46 years. We are high school sweethearts, married since 1985. She's my best friend, and life-long companion. I am blessed to share my life with her, that 1977 date is one I'll never forget......
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Greg Massey on July 30, 2023, 04:01:51 PM
Some of my fond memories were hunting out of Alton Missouri and camping for days and week at a time with some awesome hunting buddies. We camped off the Eleven Point River and hunted the Irish Wilderness. These were the days you could stand in one SPOT and walk a small circle trying to decide which gobbler to go after. You could hear a gobbler in every direction. We all still get together in our old age and talk about all the good times we had while camping and hunting gobblers. During the day one of the guys left the tent unzipped and we didn't think a lot about it our than zipping it back up later in the day, that night after we all got in the tent for bed, and everything got quite one of the guys hear a funny noise best his sleeping bag, we all jump up and got out of that tent to find a big snake had got into that tent during the day.. Thank goodness NO one was bitten. Lesson learned we never left the tent unzipped again while camping... OMG ... What memories did we make during those awesome early times in our life of chasing gobblers...
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: eggshell on July 30, 2023, 05:49:01 PM
One year my buddy and I made our annual out -of-state turkey trip and parked at one of our usual spots and went different directions. I was about a half hour early returning to the truck to find a full camp set up around my truck. I didn't know whether to be mad or go in armed and ready. One look told me this was no group to mess with. Think hells angels here and any other ruthless group you can imagine. So I slip in an open up my truck with all my radar senses working overtime. Then I hear a gruff voice say, "Hey man you get a turkey". I turn around to to see your typical biker dude enforcer type asking me and I politely said, "not today". A cheerful reply came back, "man that's a bitch, do you want some chicken al-fredo; my old lady makes the best you'll ever eat". I wanted to say no, but instead said ok. So I sat down in a camp chair and he dilivers me a gourmet dish of al-fredo and fresh bread. I visit and they inform me this is their annual camping spot for a month. They are both engineers or some professional job, I don't remember. He apologizes for setting up around me and assures me they'll move stuff to let me out. My buddy shows up and they feed him. we stay until dark and I tell them we'll move on in the morning so not to wake them and he says, Hell, tell me what time and we'll have breakfast ready". We insist that's not necessary, but he insist he'll be pissed if we don't. So we have breakfast the next morning. We take off hunting and he informs me if I kill a turkey they're cooking it for supper. That's exactly what happened, too. So we spent the next three days hunting and visiting and they guarded our gate. Not one soul parked at that gate and hunted that part of the forest but us. We did buy them some pizzas and beverages. When we left we were informed they'd see us next spring and this relationship went on for about three years. We never did have anyone venture into that spot to hunt. I will say this bunch looked the part, but were not what they appeared to be. It worked for us as everyone else was afraid of them.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: guesswho on July 30, 2023, 07:14:19 PM
Wow.  Starting as a kid turkey hunting with my parents in 1965, I have many many fond memories.   I could talk or type for days as memories come flowing back.    I won't bore y'all with the details so I'll just hit some topics.  Gator tail and swamp cabbage for breakfast lunch and supper, wild hogs running through the camp one night, aggressive Wild Brahma's everywhere , swimming in the Kissimmee River in sight of gators, F4 fighter jets not much more than tree top high, live bombs and flares, using old abandoned army tanks as a hunting blinds which were used as targets for practice runs, hearing airboats all hours of the day and night, eating frog legs and a number of other critters and varmits, exploring old wood camps  that people used at one time, wood ducks flushing in the swamps before daylight(cause a kid to add water to the already ample supply), watching an old battery grainy b&w tv at night or listening to am radio, fearless water moccasins, huge black indigo's, diamondbacks that would stretch across a two track, if you got tired of chasing turkeys in live oak hammocks you could ride a mile or two and hunt them in cypress swamps, trails that required swamp buggy's.   And to top it all off, there was no N"WTF" and there were a lot more turkeys than hunters by far.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: arkrem870 on July 30, 2023, 08:16:22 PM
I remember our old cabin in the ozarks as a kid. Wood stove for heat and an early April opener. Eating cheap ribeyes on the grill. Modified choke and #4 lead.  Later had a cutting edge comp n choke.   Papa sitting in the pile of limbs/stick ground blind in the corner of the field while I would run and gun. Hearing 8-10 gobblers from the front porch. Picking the one to go shoot. Very few turkey hunters around. None of the neighbors hunted. I hunted everyone's ground.   Times have changed





Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: WV Flopper on July 30, 2023, 10:00:56 PM
 Crap, at 50 I thought I was old. It's a wonder some of you guys have the dexterity left to type in your fingers.

Thank you guys for sharing! Awesome stuff. Great post.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Kylongspur88 on July 30, 2023, 10:19:14 PM
The absolute best experiences I've had in the turkey woods are calling in birds for other people and especially youth/young hunters. There's nothing better than watching a kid bag their first bird.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Tail Feathers on July 30, 2023, 10:51:14 PM
Quote from: Kylongspur88 on July 30, 2023, 10:19:14 PM
The absolute best experiences I've had in the turkey woods are calling in birds for other people and especially youth/young hunters. There's nothing better than watching a kid bag their first bird.
I've got a good friend named Randy.  Randy is crippled up from breaking his neck as a teen.  Couldn't walk very good most of his life, can hardly walk at all now.  I took up turkey hunting on my own, didn't know anyone who hunted them.  I killed my first longbeard on opening morning and it was an epic hunt, shoulda had a video camera crew with me.  I was so pumped up that I went home and called the only person I thought of that may could take off work at a moment's notice.  I called Randy, he owned his own business.  He jumped at the chance.  Went back within 100 yards of where I killed my tom.  Randy fell twice walking to the spot, I didn't fully appreciate how hard walking was for him then.  He brought his own gun, he showed up with a nickle plated receiver Benelli Montefeltro with a modified choke in it.  :help:
We called in two toms and he took the near one at 12 yards.  The gobbling and strutting was once again as good and memorable as any I've seen since. Randy was hooked as bad as I was at that point and we had many great turkey trips and hunts together.  Sadly, his conditioned worsened and after a big neck surgery that he couldn't shoot a gun any longer.  He tried a crossbow on deer but the mobility issue took him out of the hunting game for good.  We still share great memories of many good hunts tho. :icon_thumright:
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Paulmyr on July 31, 2023, 12:47:28 AM
Quote from: Kylongspur88 on July 30, 2023, 10:19:14 PM
The absolute best experiences I've had in the turkey woods are calling in birds for other people and especially youth/young hunters. There's nothing better than watching a kid bag their first bird.

When I call them in for my dad he gets all shook up. I haven't had the pleasure of calling for him the last 2 years. He just turned 80, a tad more than a little over weight, bad ankle even after replacement surgery. After he got the Covid he hasn't felt up to it. Hopefully next year. Been calling for him for darn near 20 years. He's the only person I've ever been in the turkey woods with other than 3 occasions with others in over 30 years.  2 of them I met on OG.

The other was with the head ranger from a state park in  NW Ga where I camped during my turkey forays to the south before the season opened in the frozen tundra.One of my fondest memories. The night before the hunt I was sitting after dinner with his assistant on the deck of his living quarters on Park property. He wanted to hear how good i was with a mouth call. I obliged and layed it on real thick. I could call real good and was just coming into my own as a hunter. It wasn't long a hen came running through the park looking for all the commotion. The head ranger must have got wind of this and asked  I knew where some turkeys were and if so if I'd take him there  and call for him in the morning seeing as I had filled my tags and was leaving for home soon. I was pretty sure I knew where some gobblers would be so I put my departure off a day and led him to the spot early the next morning.

As the sun came we could hear some gobblers off on private land. We were sitting on a log waiting for something nearby to sound off.

It was killing me to not call out to the gobblers we could hear and when I looked at the ranger he was as cool as a cucumber and asked for more coffee as I had a thermos full. He didn't hear so well. I think he could only make out 2 of the 5 or 6 gobblers in the distance. I was getting antsy to say the least but we just sat there on the log sipping coffee and listening to the turkey woods wake up and watching the sun rise.

Every so often he'd lean over and ask if I could hear any gobblers on the public side of the boundary and I'd respond with a no and we'd go back to listening.

After about an hour of this I finally heard a gobble back behind us up on the next public ridge over. I informed the ranger and the bird gobbled again much closer in the creek bed behind an below us. I said he's coming out way and he's coming fast.

The ranger sprung to his feet and I informed him the turkey just gobbled  up on our ridge about 300 yds away. The ranger picked a tree about 30 yds away in the direction of the gobbler and hastily set out his decoy. I pulled up a tree close to where we were sitting and waited for the ranger to complete his set up and settle in to the base of his selected tree.

Again the gobbler sounded off, this time down in the creek on the opposite side of our ridge. He had crossed over our ridge and was making a bee line to the turkeys out on private. I was waiting and called to him right away to try and stop him. He readily replied and held his ground about 150 yds away after a little back and forth. Problem was he was closer to me than he was the ranger and if he came in I might be in the line of fire.

I'm sure the ranger realized this as I caught him looking over his shoulder at me. I cutt at the gobbler real hard a couple times and he ate it up. With the ranger still looking at me I began to crawl a half circle back behind the ranger to take myself out of the field of play yelping and scratching the leaves as I went. When I arrived at my new set up about 30yds beyond the ranger from the gobbler the ranger acknowledged with a head nod and turned his focus back to the gobbler.

Having quickly settled in to my new location I cutt at the gobbler again and he gobbled much closer than where he was holding his ground. It was time to go quiet. I stared at the woods and the ranger intently. After few moments I seen the ranger raise his gun. I was waiting for the hammer to drop when all of the sudden there was a loud clap of thunder followed by gusting winds and a downpour. A thunderstorm rolled in over the top of the ridge. After what seemed an eternity the ranger lowered his gun and stood up.

As quickly as the thunderstorm rolled over the ridge it dissipated  and by the time I walked up the ranger it was no longer raining and the skies were clearing. I asked if he seen the gobbler because it sure looked like it. He said sure did, he was at 30yds and walked behind a tree. I was waiting for him to step out when the storm blew in and never seen him again. It just wasn't his time to die!

We were soaking wet but before heading to the truck the ranger looked at me and said "Boy, you ain't missing a thing!" I was filled with pride. This was the guy I spent the previous 3 years tormenting with all my questions about turkey hunting when ever I ran into him in the park. To be honest I would go looking for him to pick his brain. He had to his place for dinner a couple times. I guess he could be considered my mentor as I knew no other serious turkey hunters. I learned a lot about patience that day and my way of hunting turkey changed. I no longer felt the need to run after and call to every turkey. I found myself sitting and listening more, reacting or not to what I was hearing/seeing around me. Picking my battles and where they took place instead of running headlong into them.

I spent early spring chasing turkeys in northwest Ga. for about ten 10yrs until life happened and I wasn't able to make the trips anymore. 3 years ago after 20 years I was able to once again spend an early spring chasing gobblers in NW Ga. I drove all day and all night to arrive at the very spot I just wrote about. I had to go there. I had no choice. It's one of my happy places. Even though I hadn't been there for many years, I found myself there quite often. Something would trigger my memory and bring me back there so when I pulled up to the gate, tried futilely to get a wink of sleep, and heard the whippoorwills a smile spread across my face. I was back after many long years. It was almost like coming home!
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: crow on July 31, 2023, 06:46:18 AM
I can remember my first time of putting meat in the pot. I was with my Pop Pop on the farm, too young to be legal and no official mentor program back then but when the adults thought you were ready, then you were ready.

  We had put the sneak on some pigeons, I shot one with my Grandmothers single shot .410, He shot 2 with his old Fox SXS. My Grandmother made a potpie out of them. These were farmers that went thru the depression raising a bunch of kids and not much got thrown away. I grew up watching Daniel Boone and always liked the pioneer hunter stories, I can still remember the proud feeling as a little fellow of helping to put meat in the pot.


My first real game, a rabbit came several weeks later. We were posted at the head of a hedgerow and the dogs were having a good chase, I can still hear my uncle saying to make sure I didn't shoot his dog, and my Pop pop saying "I got him" lol. A great way to grow up.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Tom007 on July 31, 2023, 07:31:19 AM
The fondest Turkey Memory for me is my first Turkey harvest in the early 80's. I can remember this as if it were yesterday. It was my second season of Turkey hunting. The first year I called one gobbler in, but over-calling had him skirt around me, no shot opportunity. I was devastated, I spent an hour calling him in. That off season, I read some turkey hunting literature and realized that limited, soft, infrequent calling works much better on mature gobblers. The following spring I went back to the same spot thinking that Tom would still be there, he was. I did get tighter on him in the roost. At daylight, a crow sounded off, BOOM, he gobbled. He was about 150 yards away. It was still too dark, so I waited. Once I thought it was light enough for fly-down, I did some soft yelps on my mouth call. He gobbled again, twice. It was then that I said "Don't call" anymore. He knows where I am. A few minutes later, he gobbled again, this time he was closer and on the ground. With my gun up on my knee, I pointed in the direction I thought he was coming from. Next thing I see is the Red White head coming towards me in my direction. He was about 50 yards out, but I had to move the gun a bit to the right for the shot. I noticed a big pine tree ahead of him about 35 yards from me. I decided I would make my move when he got behind the pine. He walked behind it, I shifted. He stopped behind it. I got nervous he spotted me, but I waited. He proceeded to step out and looked in my direction. I had a clear shot, boom. He flopped. I never thought I would harvest a Wild Turkey, I'll never forget picking him up and admiring the beautiful feathers with the irredecent colors. He had a 10 inch beard, 1 inch spurs and weighed 23 pounds. This hunt is one that is etched in my memory for ever. I smiled all the way home, it is a day I will never forget....
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Spurs on August 02, 2023, 06:47:55 AM
My first turkey was not what really got me addicted...it was my first turkey as a non resident in Mississippi.  Until my mid 20s, I considered myself more of a duck hunter and passed time turkey hunting.  MS had kicked my butt the previous year and I had some time off between jobs, so I rolled back down to the "Land of few to hunt with plenty".

For 6 days straight, I was never really "ON" a bird.  Heard some early, walked a million miles, had a rattle snake strike the bottom of my boot (3 miles back without cell phone service too). 

I had a spot marked on the old forest service map that I had been passing almost daily, but it was one of those places I thought it was TOO obvious.  I never saw a truck there, but I just had a feeling that someone was hunting it while I was in the woods and left before I drove out.

Last day, last stop, and had to be back at the truck in under an hour to make the empty handed drive with a dose of tag soup.  I decided I'd make a quick walk down the fire break.  To my surprise, there was not a single boot track 50 yards outside of the parking spot.  I guess that everyone thought the same thing I did.  Half mile further and a tom barked back at my box call.  Within 3 minutes I had my first OOS tom by the leg. 

That hunt there is what changed my direction.  It lit a spark in me that would change the course of my outdoors experience and created a drive like no other pass time ever had. 

I have had dozens of fond memories in the turkey woods, but that one was a game changer for me. 
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: eggshell on August 02, 2023, 07:25:29 AM
I been pondering this topic and what story to tell. It dawned on me just now as spur talked about his first out-of-state bird and the empty drive home. Driving to and from hunts with friends in the truck are absolutely some of the best times. The conversations are about reliving the hunt and many times turn to the deeply personal. I have engaged in many conversations where heavy burdens are laid bare by both myself and fellow travelers. Turkey  hunters trust one another with their deepest feelings and struggles. Many things have been shared in my truck that will never be spoken of outside that cab. It is a form of therapy. It's like sitting on the tailgate at the end of the day having a snack and drink. It does not matter if your admiring a bird or just tired and ready to roll....it's commonly accepted as a good day. The turkey woods is an escape from all the evil of the world and puts you square in the middle of Eden. So many days Jesus has met me in the turkey woods and as the old hymn says, "He walked with me and talked with me and tells me i am his own". The world thinks it's about killing, for many of us it's much more.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Kygobblergetter on August 03, 2023, 01:45:50 AM
Hunting Georgia this spring my buddy and I ran into an "old pro" we talked for a while and he ended up giving us a ride back to our truck. He was quite the character and told us stories of how he got in to turkey hunting as a young man and how secretive it was back then. He told us about lots of hunts in the 80s and was just great over all. He was definitely doubting us until I noticed his 28 gauge double with a skinner peep on it. It made for one of the best experiences from a turkey hunting trip yet. Dodging the 3 mile walk back to the truck up a steep mountain was great but talking to Dan was truly a great experience. I sure hope he got that bird he had been chasing


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Kygobblergetter on August 03, 2023, 02:21:06 AM
Opening day in my home state. A private farm I hunt with my dad and brother. We had been scouting two birds but come opening day they roosted in another area. We sat up for my brother and I to shoot a double and my dad was hunting another bird. I called the two up but in the thick woods we could never get a clean shot at both of them at the same time. Finally just told my brother to kill one and he did. The other bird flew off before I could get a shot. We sat relaxing for a half hour or so celebrating his bird when a bird gobbled in the direction that the other flew. Young and anxious we immediately took off his direction. He gobbled pretty good on his own so we decided to circle and call him the opposite way of where his buddy had just been killed. When I called he answered and we slipped in tight. Finally I decided I could go no further and set up. After about 5 minutes in to our set up I spot the longbeard 50 yards away sitting in a tree. How he didn't see us get there I will never know. I'd say legally I could have shot him up there since it was where he landed when his buddy got shot and not his roost but I wanted to wait anyway. A little more sweet talk and he was wobbling on the limb clearly about to fly down right below us so I got ready. Sure enough he pitched down into the creek bottom 25 yards away. The second he hit the ground a big raccoon came out of the bottom of a hollow tree chasing him and right on his tail. My brother was so shocked he said out loud "Brent there's an animal!" I shot the longbeard while he was running from the coon and then swung to roll the coon as he was running away but my brother talked me out of it. Probably the dumbest turkey I've ever killed but every season "there's an animal!" Gets brought up several times


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Farmboy27 on August 05, 2023, 04:54:28 PM
Oh man. I have so many fond memories of hunting that it would take a book to recall them all!!  My absolute favorites would be watching my son grow from a little squirt who could barely carry a gun into the 17 year old man he is today!  So many memories of turkey and deer hunts. So many times that I'm sure ny heart was pumping even harder than his!  And all the while watching him grow up into a fine young man. He love the outdoors just as much as I do and has a 98% gpa in school! 
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Tail Feathers on August 05, 2023, 05:14:42 PM
Quote from: Farmboy27 on August 05, 2023, 04:54:28 PM
Oh man. I have so many fond memories of hunting that it would take a book to recall them all!!  My absolute favorites would be watching my son grow from a little squirt who could barely carry a gun into the 17 year old man he is today!  So many memories of turkey and deer hunts. So many times that I'm sure ny heart was pumping even harder than his!  And all the while watching him grow up into a fine young man. He love the outdoors just as much as I do and has a 98% gpa in school!
My oldest grandson killed his first turkey, a 1.5" double beard trophy bird.  I think he was more excited when I tossed him the keys and told him to go get the truck.  He was 14, his first time driving alone.  All 600 yards of it.  :)
They do grow up fast.
Title: Re: Turkey hunting fond memories, non-turkey experiences too
Post by: Sir-diealot on August 05, 2023, 10:58:39 PM
One of my best memories is out turkey hunting I heard something coming down the tree above me and sat still and had a chipmunk get on my head and jump down to my then very ample belly and run down my right leg and sit on the toe of my boot and just hang out there a while. It knew something was not quite right but it could not figure it out. Eventually he left the way he came.

That same morning I saw what to me is still the most beautiful thing I have ever seen outdoors, I had set up against the same tree and as the morning sun got just right I looked to my right and slightly behind me and saw a beautifully intricate spiderweb with the sun shining on it and the morning dew glistened on it like diamonds. I love this world that God created.