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Started by Tom007, June 07, 2024, 07:21:24 AM
Quote from: ChesterCopperpot on June 09, 2024, 07:46:08 AMVery rare for me to get on a bird on the roost. Where I hunt terrain dictates you take your time getting to him if you do. In the mountains you'll bugger a whole bunch of things up if you just go taking off fast as you can toward one on the roost, plus it's just big, big country. Best to take your time. Add to that, we just don't have the birds we used to have, so the days of hearing three or four and having to decide which one to go to are long behind us. Past few seasons it's seemed I've averaged hearing a bird once every three days, and that's usually walking 8-10 miles a day. You get in a good gap before daylight and listen to as much country as you can. If you hear one, great. But if you don't, you just get to walking. Big country and every little cove is like a bowl of sound. You can have a tiny ridge separating you and until you hit that lip you can't hear that other side. All that to say, most times I'm finding birds 8-10, 9-11, somewhere in there.
Quote from: Dougas on June 07, 2024, 06:56:15 PMOn returning to the roost tree after killing one there. This year, after twelve years of great success on my private property, something changed and I only saw 2 turkeys there all season and I shot one. Usually I see hens and toms all over. I suspect that neighbors called the fish and game and they came out and trapped the area and did their "culling" routine and gave the meat to the homeless. They won't relocate them.
Quote from: Dougas on June 17, 2024, 08:53:02 PMI'm in Western Oregon. Turkeys are more of a nuisance than a game animal here. In a 20 mile circumference on any given day, in any part of the year, I will see between 20 and 100. I will have 5 to 20 in my yard on any given day. Huge toms, several bearded hens, huge toms that are spurless as well. I live about a quarter of a mile from the city limits in town.
Quote from: b wilt on June 17, 2024, 09:36:59 PMQuote from: Dougas on June 17, 2024, 08:53:02 PMI'm in Western Oregon. Turkeys are more of a nuisance than a game animal here. In a 20 mile circumference on any given day, in any part of the year, I will see between 20 and 100. I will have 5 to 20 in my yard on any given day. Huge toms, several bearded hens, huge toms that are spurless as well. I live about a quarter of a mile from the city limits in town.Sounds like Heaven, LOL
Quote from: GobbleNut on June 21, 2024, 05:29:42 PMI think a fitting secondary question to ask regarding this subject is how many birds any of us may have killed as a result of HEARING those gobblers when they were on the roost, whether we killed them right at fly-down or perhaps a bit later?Of the seven gobblers I was involved in the harvest of this year, all but one of those was a result of me locating them on the roost and then either calling them in immediately or maneuvering on them and killing them a little later. The point being that, for me at least, the importance of being out there in the woods when that early morning roost-gobbling is occurring can't be overstated...whether I kill them right away or not.