I think before season next year I'm gonna find some reliable non hunting person around and have them go out and listen for the first hour.. When you have property to hunt spread out everywhere and your the soul hunter I've wasted 6-7 good mornings each year pre season and during trying to find birds at some propertys. I could easily pay $20-25 for one hour to somebody just to listen.
Where you at? I'm retired. But, I do hunt.......... :turkey2:
I've had watchers and listeners for years. All it costs me is some deer/hog and turkey meat here and there. Can't ever have to many eyes and ears scattered around. Most of the folks I rely on live on or close to the properties.
Quote from: renegade19 on April 27, 2017, 05:40:39 PM
Where you at? I'm retired. But, I do hunt.......... :turkey2:
This!
I need to find someone to do my job and take care of my kids, that's my struggle.
I'm fortunate that two of the horse farms I hunt are less than 2 miles apart. Both women who own those farms keep their eyes and ears open to let me know if they see or hear any gobblers. It paid off again this year as one farm owner saw 3 longbeards in the field beside to the other woman's farm. She told me where they were hanging out and I was able to tag one the following morning.
The ladies are beginning to be able to tell hens from gobblers, but when I first started hunting those farms I was lucky to get a number to go along with "Hey, We saw some turkeys!" They know to check what time it is and look for a beard or a red head. Neither farm is very big, so if the turkeys are around, I've got a fair chance at them in the next few days. My biggest problem is getting time off work to hunt.
Jim
Jim
I do my own scouting/hunting/listening I enjoy every part of the hunt and wouldn't pay someone else if I had a million dollars.
^^^^^^^^^THIS FER SURE^^^^^^^^
I am lucky to have good health at 61, so can find my own birds. Do 90 percent of my hunting on national forest and public land, so put a lot of miles on. I guess paying someone to listen for gobbles isn't all that different then a semi or guided hunt. I think that extra money could be traded in for extra vacation time. And enjoy the scouting.
Sounds great. Stick RPG 2 unblocked (http://qingzhiliao.com/stick-rpg-2.html)
I'm your guy and can start around the first of April.
I use my wife for this. Yes I am lucky.
I have family and friends that help...but i hear way better than most...so i still go and check all my spots it's that excitement that gets you ready for opening day...
Do all the dirty work and you just go out and shoot them. Sounds like a blast! What Massey said, its part of the hunt. How bout roost/scout your own birds, its a much better feeling when you connect with one. Fot your $20 go buy two Butterballs.
Probably 90% of the time, maybe more, I cold roll into a property and kill birds.
Listen for the gobble, listen again for a direction, use terrain/topography to your advantage, set up and call to the bird. Adjust as necessary.
It's nice when you have somebody tell your they've seen/heard birds in a certain location, but I don't ever see myself paying somebody to scout for me.
Quote from: Poleaxe on April 27, 2017, 05:38:41 PM
I think before season next year I'm gonna find some reliable non hunting person around and have them go out and listen for the first hour.. When you have property to hunt spread out everywhere and your the soul hunter I've wasted 6-7 good mornings each year pre season and during trying to find birds at some propertys. I could easily pay $20-25 for one hour to somebody just to listen.
Your point is well-taken. There are definitely places that you can spend more time searching for a bird to hunt than you do actually hunting. For those that live in those types of places and do not have much scouting time due to work, distance from their hunting spots, or other commitments, it would be wise to find sources to help out with locating birds. I would personally rather not pay someone to do that for me, but if there was no other feasible option, it might be a wise thing to do.
I prefer to do my own scouting. Most of my hunting spots are an hour drive or so. I scout as I hunt and file away info for the following year. My public land spots don't typically change from year to year so I have a pretty good handle on where to find birds. Now the leases I hunt are owned by timber companies so the habitat tends to change drastically from one year to the next. I don't hunt any farms or private ground so to speak. Every bird I have to hunt can potentially be hunted by several hundred others. So keeping up with the shift of birds due to pressure, breeding and food preferences as well as timbering activities keeps me busy. I feel as long as I am in earshot of a bird at daylight then I am fine. Over the course of a year or two I fine tune things and get a lot tighter on them on the roost. In all reality tho I may scout 3-4 days a year before season and that's mainly prospecting brand new ground to possibly start hunting in the future depending on what I find.
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Quote from: Phillipshunt on April 28, 2017, 07:33:16 PM
I do my own scouting/hunting/listening I enjoy every part of the hunt and wouldn't pay someone else if I had a million dollars.
+1
I'm lucky I just have to walk out on my deck and look and listen on weekends.During the week I'm leaving for work before the birds wake up ,but luckily I have 2 boys that are addicted to it and pay attention to where they are.Also my dad is retired so he keeps a good handle on them to. I know I am very fortunate to live where I do.My dad actually watched my youngest son kill his turkey this year from my driveway during youth season.