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Scouting or just trusting your spot?

Started by Zfhunter1, February 21, 2026, 07:14:29 PM

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Happy

Very little scouting on my end. As long as I am within earshot of one then I am good.  I just enjoy the play it by ear approach.

Good-Looking and Platinum member of the Elitist Club

Missed mallards

Going to look. Last year I rolled up to find the timber gone lol!

But will gravitate to old haunts and prospect for new!

backforty

I enjoy getting out and listening and marking birds prior to season. I hunt public so I like to have numerous birds located in different areas. Always good to have backups.


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callmakerman

I always scout my areas private and public. #1 after a long winter I enjoy my walks through the areas I hunt. #2 I take note of the birds that are gobbling and where they're at on the properties. #3 While I'm out and about, I can clear some of my old go to sitting spots. These are historically where we've killed many birds over the years and maybe a few new ones. Getting out in the woods and putting some miles on and listening to everything come alive in the spring is one of the best times of the year.

Dtrkyman

I love to scout, currently the places I hunt are far from home so I rarely do, I try and show up the day before I start and get some intel on historical spots.

Birds are often not in the same places but nearby, amount of snow in the mountains dictates a lot where I start my season off, a few springs back there was still 3 feet of snow where I killed a bird the prior opener!


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Davyalabama

You can tell, it depends on the situation, the terrain, the birds, there are so many variables.  I love to listen in the morning, those gobbles just........whew.  Ok, but what happens up in the day is very important, too.  Yes, we all want that bird to fly down, call to him, he comes right in....bam, we go take pictures, pluck, singe, put him in the cooler and head for home, all before 7:30. 

Yeah, that doesn't happen very often......So, what are you going to do ---- when he's henned up and heading the other way?  What are you going to do at 11:00, and you still haven't killed him?  Where do they like to hang out and go about their day?  They don't just leave the woods and go for breakfast, they don't go lay up somewhere like a huge buck.  They are foraging for food, as much as the gobbler wants sex, he still needs some food.  He also needs that female attention, he likes to be with hens.  Now, early in the season, he may hang with other gobblers, later in the season, very rarely will you see two major longbeards hanging together.  Now, this is in my part of Bama, it could be totally different somewhere else, so don't even take that as all knowing.

You ask most turkey hunters ---- they kill gobblers way after 8:00 ---- You either have to trust your one spot and "hope" he comes back looking for that hen --- get in front of the group ---- or know where the group is headed and be there ahead of them.  I've killed a lot of turkeys knowing where they want to be and just set up there first thing in the morning.  Why, I may have dealt with that old bird, know he likes to gobble his head off, loves talking to me, and still is going to head the other way.  Fine, I ain't playing that game too many mornings, I'll wait you out and ambush you where I know you want to be about 10:00 or 11:00 or 12:00.    Some birds aren't killable, for me, until the afternoon, I'll kill him heading back to the roost. 

Now, you have to be ever present in your scouting, you can't just go around busting birds, talking loud, walking and breaking sticks, your scouting must be: purposeful, just like you are hunting, quiet, stealthy, the birds not knowing you are there --- yep, a journal was mentioned, use one --- You can't take someone that loves to talk scouting for birds, they get bored, won't shut up, that ain't scouting, that's just fellowship, meet him on another day at waffle house, don't take him/her scouting. 

Love the Lord God with all your heart, mind and soul.  Love others as yourself.

Let us be silent, so we hear the whisper of God.

No one cares how much you know, until they know how much you care.