registration is free , easy and welcomed !!!
Started by Dhamilton1, April 16, 2025, 01:05:55 PM
Quote from: RutnNStrutn on April 16, 2025, 02:02:10 PMI give them some soft tree talk to let them know a hen is there. Then I shut up until they've flown down. Unless there are real hens calling to the gobbler. Then I try to out call the hens.
Quote from: GobbleNut on Today at 09:05:47 AMTo me, the issue is not WHETHER you call to them, the issue is WHEN you call, HOW MUCH you call, and WHAT you are saying to them. Calling when you should, how much you should, (and saying what you should be "saying" as a hen turkey on the roost) is not a bad thing...but knowing that "when, what, and how much" stuff can be pretty tricky at times, even for those with lots of experience doing it...much less for the guy that doesn't have much experience.From what I have seen, too many (newer) hunters think that calling to a gobbler on the roost is a function of when and how much he is gobbling. They start calling when the gobbler starts gobbling (often way earlier than hens start talking), and they think "if the gobble is gobbling back at my calling, I should just keep calling to him". Sure, there are times when a gobbler is so hot that he will fly down and come to that sort of thing. From my experience having gone through the learning process, calling too early and too much is a sure-fire way to put a gobbler on the alert that something ain't right. More importantly, if that gobbler has hens with him, even if he is impressed with the calling, those hens most certainly are not going to be. They know full well when their sisters in the trees will start talking to each other...and if they hear a stranger start lighting up way sooner...and way more...than she should, they ain't gonna buy it. Even if the gobbler is more than willing to come take a look, those hens are going to say "uh, uh, junior, we are flying out of here and goin' the other way". In summary, calling to one on the roost is okay...you just have to know when to do it, how much of it to do, and what to say...both to the gobbler and any hens he might have around him.