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Started by Greg Massey, March 08, 2025, 10:16:44 AM
Quote from: tlewis81 on March 09, 2025, 08:42:40 AMfirst and foremost every situation/bird is different....ive killed birds calling soft/loud..calling a lot or calling a little...my expierence is woodsmanship will kill more than calling...so setup to me is a huge part of that...knowing/reading that particular bird or flock as well 1 hunt a few years back i never made a call until I cut loudly and sharp twice to get a gobbler to stop and peekaboo for the shot...was an incredible 30 minutes of tree talk between the flock...but I knew where they landed and loafed the previous day and I got in tight in the dark
Quote from: NEhomer on March 09, 2025, 09:00:57 AMTurkey calling and fly casting are commonly over-rated.You don't want to squawk or flail but competent is quite adequate for the overwhelming number of cases of success.
Quote from: GobbleNut on March 09, 2025, 09:28:35 AMA couple of things: Set-up: Yes, set-up is important...and knowing where to set up by patterning turkeys can kill you a gobbler...whether you know squat about turkey calling or not. If that is your bag, that will work. On the other hand (and in my opinion only), skillful calling in terms of realism and applying all the various elements to that will also get you gobblers that will come to you even if you are not in the ideal location. That is one time when (genuine) realism and knowing what to say and when will make a difference.Cadence: We speak of cadence in turkey calling a lot. Some folks seem to think that cadence means calling like you are marching to a steady drum beat...couldn't be further from the truth. Yes, there is a "rhythm" to turkey calling, but it ain't to a drum beat...that is, same note spacing, same volume, same tonal quality, etc. Real live turkeys rarely do that...so don't...
Quote from: Marc on March 09, 2025, 02:47:29 PMQuote from: NEhomer on March 09, 2025, 09:00:57 AMTurkey calling and fly casting are commonly over-rated.You don't want to squawk or flail but competent is quite adequate for the overwhelming number of cases of success.Good post... I do not completely disagree, but...I fly fish as well... There are certainly days when fish will take almost any presentation that even vaguely resembles whatever is coming off... I have also fished spring creeks in which a perfect cast and perfect drift with specific size/color of flies makes a huge difference. Fishing pressure and water clarity come to play here.As I mentioned earlier, I have seen turkeys that probably would have come in to someone rubbing two garbage can lids together... That period of time when the hens first stop using the roosts to sit on the nests, those toms can be particularly vulnerable to just about any sound that possibly resembles a hen....But... There are situations with henned up or cautious birds in which good calling and a strategic setup are required to be (more) successful. There have been times that I felt that my calling has pulled in birds, and there have been times I felt that my mistakes or lack of realism have prevented me from killing killable birds.I know I have a ways to go on my calling (especially with a diaphragm). Wish I had more time and access to more productive areas to hunt. Some/many people enjoy the time in the field, and if they can kill an occasional bird, all the better. For me, I need some degree of success to enjoy turkey hunting. Neither approach is right or wrong.I have a limited amount of time, so I am limited to the knowledge of experience that time in the field allows... But, I can practice calling to my heart's content. It is the one aspect of becoming a better hunter that we all have some command of. I am certainly not as good a caller as I want to be, but I am better than I was even a year ago.I have limited time in the field (and on the water), so... I do what I can to be as successful as my own situation allows for... If I am going on a fishing excursion, I will practice casting for distance and accuracy before a "big trip," and I practice and record my turkey calling (replacing mouth calls that need replacing) before the season... I have kids, and serve the public, so my patience is continuously being testing. Quote from: GobbleNut on March 09, 2025, 09:28:35 AMA couple of things: Set-up: Yes, set-up is important...and knowing where to set up by patterning turkeys can kill you a gobbler...whether you know squat about turkey calling or not. If that is your bag, that will work. On the other hand (and in my opinion only), skillful calling in terms of realism and applying all the various elements to that will also get you gobblers that will come to you even if you are not in the ideal location. That is one time when (genuine) realism and knowing what to say and when will make a difference.Cadence: We speak of cadence in turkey calling a lot. Some folks seem to think that cadence means calling like you are marching to a steady drum beat...couldn't be further from the truth. Yes, there is a "rhythm" to turkey calling, but it ain't to a drum beat...that is, same note spacing, same volume, same tonal quality, etc. Real live turkeys rarely do that...so don't... Well said!I will only add that while you can set up on turkeys and often more successful kill them without calling at all... That is not for me. If I am taking a kid or inexperienced hunter, in which harvesting a bird is a larger consideration, I have and will continue to employ such tactics... Set up and quietly wait for the birds to show...But... I do not think I would personally harvest a bird I did not (feel) I call in at this point... Last season, I was setting up for a longer sit, and without making a call, a bird showed up (while I was getting set up). He got a pass... I love shooting a bird that comes in gobbling to my call... I will not pass a bird that quietly comes in looking for the hen (that is me). But I will not kill a bird that I did not have a part in fooling (and that is ONLY my personal preference).I will also add that I love hearing a gobble while turkey hunting, but it is the hens I actually LISTEN to. The sounds they make, and when and how they make them... I will admit that new hearing enhancement allowed me to hear turkey sounds I had only heard about last season, and I will attempt to emulate some of these sounds this season.
Quote from: NEhomer on March 09, 2025, 09:00:57 AMTurkey calling and fly casting are commonly over-rated.
Quote from: tlewis81 on March 09, 2025, 03:30:58 PMwhat enhancement did you acquire?
Quote from: Ihuntoldschool on March 09, 2025, 01:01:55 PMNever heard a real hen sound fake. They all sound real. Loud/soft. The answer is Yes. Hens call loud. Hens call soft.
Quote from: Penguin907 on March 09, 2025, 06:10:08 PMI think realness is less important when trying to trigger a gobbler with loud noses for location.