...ever heard a bird spit and drum?
Several years ago a friend and I were set up on the field in the photo. Dekes are 25 yards from our setup and the edge of the woods in the background are about another 100 yards. Late one morning we got a bird to gobble from that patch of woods. He was in his strut zone about 75 yards up in the woods and we could catch a glimpse of him every now and then strutting back and forth. We could also hear him spit & drum clear as day and he was right at 200 yards away!
Were the conditions just right for the sound to carry or was this a loud strutter? It was late in the season and we were well into spring "green up."
(http://i125.photobucket.com/albums/p75/barry61/IMG_7053_1_1_zps4f212f78.jpg)
Hey Barry
First of all, I hope you killed that gobbler. Before I lost some of my hearing from all the years in the paper mill I could hear a gobbler spit & drum from a pretty good distance. I think the conditions were perfect to hear one from 200 yards away. On a good calm day I can hear one from about 100 yards or so.
Ricky :newmascot:
The furthest I've heard one was about 100 yards away. It was a clear, cold, crisp morning in Nebraska. I think sound carries better in those conditions. I also have documented hearing loss from my job as a firefighter :firefighter:, so I can't really comment on what distance you can normally hear them from.
Don't know for sure but better than 100 yards under the right conditions.
We had one on public land we named Thunder Gut. He was known for staying with hens and then stopping 100 to 125 yards out and spitting and drumming VERY loud. He would vibrate your chest from that far away.
In the tree, early season and the right conditions, hearing one 200 yards wouldn't be to far of a stretch. I've had numerous people with me on different hunts before flydown and I'd tell them I hear drumming. They couldn't hear it. I'd point to where I heard it and tell them if I'm hearing drumming he'll gobble right there. Sure enough, gobble, gobble.
And RutnNStrutn, Steve is one of those folks :TooFunny:
I can hear the spit part, but apparently my hearing doesn't pick up on the drum part... I have heard it on videos, but never in the woods. :-[
About 75-100 yards for me. Mainly due to the fact that I hunt pretty thick areas.
40 yards is the furthest you are allowed to talk about hearing drumming or spitting! :TooFunny:
I have heard them around 100 yards away, but my ears have heard too many 357 and 41 magnums go off with no earplugs...
Quote from: spaightlabs on February 26, 2013, 03:32:25 PM
40 yards is the furthest you are allowed to talk about hearing drumming or spitting! :TooFunny:
:TooFunny: :TooFunny: :TooFunny:
about 75yds or so
I can't hear it over my heart beat and loud breathing.
my hearing has taken a toll with age like the rest of me and i doubt i could hear one as far as you did.however,my rule of thumb has always been when i can't see him but hear him spit and drum means i don't move anything but my eyes.he normally,has slipped up behind me. ;D
I can sometimes--- if they are in a tree hear them from about 100 yards , but the sound is distorted , I dont hear the spit sound , what I hear is a very faint vroooom, vrooom almost like a bumble bee humming its wings - or like a truck going over a bridge of cattle gate from a long distance
The worst is when you hear them real close ....PFIT, VRoooOOOOM and you ant see them , they are looking straight at you and you cant see them , I had a gobbler do that to me for about a hour a few years ago and he was about 10 yards behind me the whole time - finally I turned around and shot his #$% dead in the sand
I've only heard it once. Started about 20 yards behind me,and stopped about 3 yards away. I shot him soon after.
I've heard them that far in the right conditions. Early morning strutters on the limb you can hear a long ways. Most of that is because there is less background noise. My last Osceola I killed because I heard him spittin and drummin. I was huntin with a guy who was setting behind me 40 yards. I was intense mode just waiting for the gobbler to show his head a the guy behind me got on his phone and started talking to someone. I finally waved at him to be quiet and he came over to me and I told him I was hearing a gobbler spit and drum. He had no clue there was a gobbler around because he couldn't hear it. I finally crawled up to a tree that I thought I needed to get to and 2 steps from the tree I hear PUTT. I just kneeled up and whacked him before he got away. So to answer your question, yes you can hear them that far away.
TRKYHTR
Quote from: TRKYHTR on February 26, 2013, 10:17:48 PM
I've heard them that far in the right conditions. Early morning strutters on the limb you can hear a long ways. Most of that is because there is less background noise. My last Osceola I killed because I heard him spittin and drummin. I was huntin with a guy who was setting behind me 40 yards. I was intense mode just waiting for the gobbler to show his head a the guy behind me got on his phone and started talking to someone. I finally waved at him to be quiet and he came over to me and I told him I was hearing a gobbler spit and drum. He had no clue there was a gobbler around because he couldn't hear it. I finally crawled up to a tree that I thought I needed to get to and 2 steps from the tree I hear PUTT. I just kneeled up and whacked him before he got away. So to answer your question, yes you can hear them that far away.
TRKYHTR
Was that the last time you hunted with that guy??
Terrain definitely makes a difference. Here where I do most of my hunting in MS woods, I can hear the drumming once they get to about ~60. Furthest I remember in MS is ~80 yards in some open bottomland hardwoods before green up. However where I hunt in the Missouri Ozarks, I can usually hear them a tad further. The understory isn't near as thick there and I just believe those larger framed birds drum a bit louder. Farthest I know for sure has been ~120 yards in Missouri woods. I was closing the distance on a gobbling bird, heard drumming and immediately plopped down. Wasn't long before I saw him coming straight my way. Last year one evening in Nebraska I watched a Merriam's from about 70-80 yards away strut in a wide open meadow. I could hear the drumming super clearly.
Quote from: Ded Goblr on February 26, 2013, 10:24:55 PM
Quote from: TRKYHTR on February 26, 2013, 10:17:48 PM
I've heard them that far in the right conditions. Early morning strutters on the limb you can hear a long ways. Most of that is because there is less background noise. My last Osceola I killed because I heard him spittin and drummin. I was huntin with a guy who was setting behind me 40 yards. I was intense mode just waiting for the gobbler to show his head a the guy behind me got on his phone and started talking to someone. I finally waved at him to be quiet and he came over to me and I told him I was hearing a gobbler spit and drum. He had no clue there was a gobbler around because he couldn't hear it. I finally crawled up to a tree that I thought I needed to get to and 2 steps from the tree I hear PUTT. I just kneeled up and whacked him before he got away. So to answer your question, yes you can hear them that far away.
TRKYHTR
Was that the last time you hunted with that guy??
Yes. He was a good guy he just couldn't hear real well. It was a public land Osceola in Ocala N.F. I think I could go back there a kill another one.
TRKYHTR
never heard one. I have profound hearing loss. I was hunting with my brother once and he heard one that was 75 to 100 yds.