I was thinking of taking a turkey fan with me, and setting it up in the open, near my hen decoy.Would this work, or spook birds?
Could go either way. One sure thing, going without the fan won't spook them.
This is the predecessor to "reaping" from what I have in seen in some videos on fanning difference was there was not the crawling/sneaking up to a turkey to take a shot... The fan was raised, turned and put back down, it would appear from a distance that another bird was silently strutting in the area of the calling. I met with a guy who used this tactic with 2 jake fans glued back to back with a stake/hand hold.
MK M GOBL
Quote from: guesswho on March 13, 2018, 07:24:05 PM
Could go either way. One sure thing, going without the fan won't spook them.
.........that's my opinion on all of the fanning
Quote from: MK M GOBL on March 13, 2018, 07:43:06 PM
This is the predecessor to "reaping" from what I have in seen in some videos on fanning difference was there was not the crawling/sneaking up to a turkey to take a shot... The fan was raised, turned and put back down, it would appear from a distance that another bird was silently strutting in the area of the calling. I met with a guy who used this tactic with 2 jake fans glued back to back with a stake/hand hold.
I don't agree with crawling around with a fan, I don't see how that could work.ive seen it on tv, it's crazy. I've been using this hen, I don't move around much, and I don't use a stake.Seeing a hunkered down hen, brings them in.Maybe a can somewhere might help.
MK M GOBL
Quote from: High plains drifter on March 13, 2018, 09:28:47 PM
Quote from: MK M GOBL on March 13, 2018, 07:43:06 PM
This is the predecessor to "reaping" from what I have in seen in some videos on fanning difference was there was not the crawling/sneaking up to a turkey to take a shot... The fan was raised, turned and put back down, it would appear from a distance that another bird was silently strutting in the area of the calling. I met with a guy who used this tactic with 2 jake fans glued back to back with a stake/hand hold.
I don't agree with crawling around with a fan, I don't see how that could work.ive seen it on tv, it's crazy. I've been using this hen, I don't move around much, and I don't use a stake.Seeing a hunkered down hen, brings them in.Maybe a can somewhere might help.
MK M GOBL
I am not promoting the "reaping" technique, all I was referring to was the use of "fanning" I do not do this either. Maybe my intention was misread. From what I have seen in fanning there was NO crawling or sneaking to get a shot. The hunter stayed in positon and would raise the fan, make some motion with it and then lay it down to their side. This was a stationary tactic, there again not promoting this at all. It would seem that fanning lead to what is now called reaping... Hope this clears it up.
I have done many Hunter's Ed Classes and the use of a "reaping decoy" in front of my body chest and head seems crazy to me, I do use more "Standard" decoys placed away from me, they are bagged and out of sight while I move and until I make a set, I never set a Tom/Jake on public (inherent danger) and still use with caution on private...
MK M GOBL
Quote from: guesswho on March 13, 2018, 07:24:05 PM
Could go either way. One sure thing, going without the fan won't spook them.
The man has a solid point.
Quote from: MK M GOBL on March 13, 2018, 10:20:07 PM
Quote from: High plains drifter on March 13, 2018, 09:28:47 PM
Quote from: MK M GOBL on March 13, 2018, 07:43:06 PM
This is the predecessor to "reaping" from what I have in seen in some videos on fanning difference was there was not the crawling/sneaking up to a turkey to take a shot... The fan was raised, turned and put back down, it would appear from a distance that another bird was silently strutting in the area of the calling. I met with a guy who used this tactic with 2 jake fans glued back to back with a stake/hand hold.
I don't agree with crawling around with a fan, I don't see how that could work.ive seen it on tv, it's crazy. I've been using this hen, I don't move around much, and I don't use a stake.Seeing a hunkered down hen, brings them in.Maybe a can somewhere might help.
MK M GOBL
I am not promoting the "reaping" technique, all I was referring to was the use of "fanning" I do not do this either. Maybe my intention was misread. From what I have seen in fanning there was NO crawling or sneaking to get a shot. The hunter stayed in positon and would raise the fan, make some motion with it and then lay it down to their side. This was a stationary tactic, there again not promoting this at all. It would seem that fanning lead to what is now called reaping... Hope this clears it up.
I have done many Hunter's Ed Classes and the use of a "reaping decoy" in front of my body chest and head seems crazy to me, I do use more "Standard" decoys placed away from me, they are bagged and out of sight while I move and until I make a set, I never set a Tom/Jake on public (inherent danger) and still use with caution on private...
I I agree, and sneaking up on a bird has no cooth anyway.I try to shoot these birds with honor.
MK M GOBL
Only use a jake fan.
First opportunity I had to use my fan was last year. 3 longbeards one single hen. Slipped up the creek to where they would be able to see me and showed them the fan. Hen left the long beards and came with in 10 yards of me. The stupid long beards tucked there tails and left the field. So yeah it could go either way when using a tail fan.
I have a fan mounted to a small block of wood that has a 5/16" stud protruding through it.
The stud screws into the stabilizer on my bow.
I remove the center tail feather and zip tie the adjacent feathers together to create an opening for the arrow to pass. You also see your pins through the center opening in the fan.
I only used it once and it worked as intended. I strategically moved on a henned up, silent gobbler when he crested a knob in a field. I sneaked up along a hedgerow and got into position at the crest of the field.
I put the fan out in front of me and rolled up on my knees to make the fan visible to the birds.
The gobbler saw me instantly and came strutting hard right into 10 steps where I severed his spinal column. Big bird. 1 1/4" spurs.
A fan on a stick in a low cut or plowed field may not work so well, I don't know. But if you get into a high grass or brush field I'm sure it would work as well as any other decoy.
I have done this. This is a far cry from reaping. This technique is just another decoy spread. If your into that. I used a fan from a gobbler I shot, spread the feathers and dried it. I wired a decoy stake to it and slip it in another stake over it so it moves gently in a breeze. I put it not in the field ,but in the wood line behind my spread. It seems very natural to me. Does it work? No clue. I'm not a big decoy guy but when things get tough and you need to focus on an area with birds, I sometimes set up for several hours and try this with soft calling. Kind of a last resort tactic.
It's just a strutter decoy without any body, sure if birds come to the funky chicken even though it doesn't look like any turkey they've ever seen they will come to a real fan where they can't seem to see the body.
A buddy of mine used to have a fan on a little wire stake ment for a for sale sign, it worked better then the little foam decoys and we sure had never heard of dsd or any of the other comanpies around today. It was free, light, and worked. He might still use it from time to time
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I watched a video of a hunter that stuck a fan stapled to a sharpened paint stirrer behind a breeder hen decoy. 2 Toms came into his set up, knocked the fan down and jumped all over it. :popcorn:
Quote from: Number17 on March 14, 2018, 08:23:34 AM
I have a fan mounted to a small block of wood that has a 5/16" stud protruding through it.
The stud screws into the stabilizer on my bow.
I remove the center tail feather and zip tie the adjacent feathers together to create an opening for the arrow to pass. You also see your pins through the center opening in the fan.
I only used it once and it worked as intended. I strategically moved on a henned up, silent gobbler when he crested a knob in a field. I sneaked up along a hedgerow and got into position at the crest of the field.
I put the fan out in front of me and rolled up on my knees to make the fan visible to the birds.
The gobbler saw me instantly and came strutting hard right into 10 steps where I severed his spinal column. Big bird. 1 1/4" spurs.
A fan on a stick in a low cut or plowed field may not work so well, I don't know. But if you get into a high grass or brush field I'm sure it would work as well as any other decoy.
This is the most stupid thing I every heard of the first time I heard of it, some one crawling behide a turkey fan. It might work but There is no turkey in this world that is important enough to take the smallest chance of being killed for. Sorry You have your point this is mine. Companys making money off peoples lack of hunting skills, and brains.
Quote from: ddturkeyhunter on March 14, 2018, 10:22:37 AM
Quote from: Number17 on March 14, 2018, 08:23:34 AM
I have a fan mounted to a small block of wood that has a 5/16" stud protruding through it.
The stud screws into the stabilizer on my bow.
I remove the center tail feather and zip tie the adjacent feathers together to create an opening for the arrow to pass. You also see your pins through the center opening in the fan.
I only used it once and it worked as intended. I strategically moved on a henned up, silent gobbler when he crested a knob in a field. I sneaked up along a hedgerow and got into position at the crest of the field.
I put the fan out in front of me and rolled up on my knees to make the fan visible to the birds.
The gobbler saw me instantly and came strutting hard right into 10 steps where I severed his spinal column. Big bird. 1 1/4" spurs.
A fan on a stick in a low cut or plowed field may not work so well, I don't know. But if you get into a high grass or brush field I'm sure it would work as well as any other decoy.
This is the most stupid thing I every heard of the first time I heard of it, some one crawling behide a turkey fan. It might work but There is no turkey in this world that is important enough to take the smallest chance of being killed for. Sorry You have your point this is mine. Companys making money off peoples lack of hunting skills, and brains.
But how do you REALLY feel? ;D ;D ;D
Thanks for all the comments, I think I'll try sticking one in a bush.Im not going to crawl with one, that seems dishonorable, and sort of bush league. I'll post the results.
Quote from: ddturkeyhunter on March 14, 2018, 10:22:37 AM
Quote from: Number17 on March 14, 2018, 08:23:34 AM
I have a fan mounted to a small block of wood that has a 5/16" stud protruding through it.
The stud screws into the stabilizer on my bow.
I remove the center tail feather and zip tie the adjacent feathers together to create an opening for the arrow to pass. You also see your pins through the center opening in the fan.
I only used it once and it worked as intended. I strategically moved on a henned up, silent gobbler when he crested a knob in a field. I sneaked up along a hedgerow and got into position at the crest of the field.
I put the fan out in front of me and rolled up on my knees to make the fan visible to the birds.
The gobbler saw me instantly and came strutting hard right into 10 steps where I severed his spinal column. Big bird. 1 1/4" spurs.
A fan on a stick in a low cut or plowed field may not work so well, I don't know. But if you get into a high grass or brush field I'm sure it would work as well as any other decoy.
This is the most stupid thing I every heard of the first time I heard of it, some one crawling behide a turkey fan. It might work but There is no turkey in this world that is important enough to take the smallest chance of being killed for. Sorry You have your point this is mine. Companys making money off peoples lack of hunting skills, and brains.
I'll nearly guarantee I've killed more Pope and Young bucks and Longbeards than you have, in more ways than you've ever dreamed about..........and with your inability to form a competent sentence from a thought in your own head, I'm certainly smarter than you in all regards. At no point in your incoherent rambling did you come anywhere near forming a complete thought.
I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.
Nobody made a nickle off me killing that bird. I took a fan from one of the numerous longbeards I've killed over the years using a multitude of techniques and attached it to my bow as a decoy. I sat down and showed the turkeys the decoy, making him enraged to the point that he came over looking for a fight.
Is it your contention that anyone who uses a decoy is stupid and incompetent?
Fanning is a far cry from reaping. Learn the difference so you don't look so foolish.
I have killed gobbler, after gobbler, after gobbler by sitting down in the woods, calling him in and knocking his head off when he came into range.
And I've killed just as many with alternative techniques. Never once from a blind.
Pics Maybe?
Quote from: Number17 on March 14, 2018, 10:37:52 PM
Quote from: ddturkeyhunter on March 14, 2018, 10:22:37 AM
Quote from: Number17 on March 14, 2018, 08:23:34 AM
I have a fan mounted to a small block of wood that has a 5/16" stud protruding through it.
The stud screws into the stabilizer on my bow.
I remove the center tail feather and zip tie the adjacent feathers together to create an opening for the arrow to pass. You also see your pins through the center opening in the fan.
I only used it once and it worked as intended. I strategically moved on a henned up, silent gobbler when he crested a knob in a field. I sneaked up along a hedgerow and got into position at the crest of the field.
I put the fan out in front of me and rolled up on my knees to make the fan visible to the birds.
The gobbler saw me instantly and came strutting hard right into 10 steps where I severed his spinal column. Big bird. 1 1/4" spurs.
A fan on a stick in a low cut or plowed field may not work so well, I don't know. But if you get into a high grass or brush field I'm sure it would work as well as any other decoy.
This is the most stupid thing I every heard of the first time I heard of it, some one crawling behide a turkey fan. It might work but There is no turkey in this world that is important enough to take the smallest chance of being killed for. Sorry You have your point this is mine. Companys making money off peoples lack of hunting skills, and brains.
I'll nearly guarantee I've killed more Pope and Young bucks and Longbeards than you have, in more ways than you've ever dreamed about..........and with your inability to form a competent sentence from a thought in your own head, I'm certainly smarter than you in all regards. At no point in your incoherent rambling did you come anywhere near forming a complete thought.
I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.
Nobody made a nickle off me killing that bird. I took a fan from one of the numerous longbeards I've killed over the years using a multitude of techniques and attached it to my bow as a decoy. I sat down and showed the turkeys the decoy, making him enraged to the point that he came over looking for a fight.
Is it your contention that anyone who uses a decoy is stupid and incompetent?
Fanning is a far cry from reaping. Learn the difference so you don't look so foolish.
I have killed gobbler, after gobbler, after gobbler by sitting down in the woods, calling him in and knocking his head off when he came into range.
And I've killed just as many with alternative techniques. Never once from a blind.
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English was not a strong point of mine nore is my computer skills I will admit. An I normally avoid causing anyone high blood pressure. But will never change my views on common sense. You posting what you did will give some (stupid)kid with less woods experance as you at risk for doing something stupid. Think about it, wasn't trying to attack you personall. And if to many people get hurt for any reason gives the anties fuel to shut us all down from turkey hunting. We are all hear for the same thing to share story, and hopefully pass good hunting skills.
Okay boys,...don't get your snoods all knotted up here. One of you was pointing out a method that, for bowhunters, is an innovative way to hunt gobblers and the other was pointing out that there are times and places where that technique could be dangerous. Both of you have valid points. Time to kiss and make up,...and carry on.... ;D