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Started by Stoeger_bird, March 10, 2021, 01:51:58 PM
Quote from: Sixes on March 12, 2021, 12:26:29 PMIt wasn't really gradual, it was over about 2 seasons. Turkeys, lots of hens and gobblers, all over the property and area, you couldn't drive to lunch and not see strutters standing in open AG fields. You couldn't ride around at 830 in the morning or half hour before dark and not see hens strolling around.Then, it was like everything died out. Gobblers and hens. Even if there was a couple of bad hatches, that doesn't explain all the missing adults from one year to the next.
Quote from: GobbleNut on March 12, 2021, 01:47:32 PMQuote from: Sixes on March 12, 2021, 12:26:29 PMIt wasn't really gradual, it was over about 2 seasons. Turkeys, lots of hens and gobblers, all over the property and area, you couldn't drive to lunch and not see strutters standing in open AG fields. You couldn't ride around at 830 in the morning or half hour before dark and not see hens strolling around.Then, it was like everything died out. Gobblers and hens. Even if there was a couple of bad hatches, that doesn't explain all the missing adults from one year to the next.That sounds like an infectious disease outbreak to me. I can't think of any other explanation for a quick die-off like that.
Quote from: dzsmith on March 12, 2021, 05:03:58 AMQuote from: Parrot Head on March 10, 2021, 06:54:36 PMIf Mississippi stays at March 15th they will get hammered every year. They will make a boat load of money but the turkeys will pay the price. Its been getting hammered man.
Quote from: Parrot Head on March 10, 2021, 06:54:36 PMIf Mississippi stays at March 15th they will get hammered every year. They will make a boat load of money but the turkeys will pay the price.
Quote from: surehuntsalot on March 18, 2021, 09:57:34 PMHere in Ms. the season has been needing to be pushed back for a while now
Quote from: tazmaniac on March 18, 2021, 10:07:19 PMQuote from: surehuntsalot on March 18, 2021, 09:57:34 PMHere in Ms. the season has been needing to be pushed back for a while nowI live in far south MS and watch toms breed hens routinely in May (if there any left to service the hens and jennies)Peak nest initiation is start of 2nd week of April down here. Very little actual breeding has occurred when season opens Mar 15th. And that's in far south MS. It's prob another 10d behind that in North MS.Sent from my SM-G970U1 using Tapatalk
Quote from: owlhoot on March 10, 2021, 08:30:24 PMQuote from: Kyle_Ott on March 10, 2021, 08:19:00 PMI don't have a stake in the southeast's current situation but I know there's a portion of turkey hunters who seem to be the only fools on earth who don't believe that bag limit reductions and shortened seasons would help more turkeys survive each year.When goose or duck numbers go down, USFWS reduce the limits and shorten the seasons. When whitetail deer numbers go down, state agencies decrease the bag limits. Wild turkey numbers were highest when we had considerably fewer hunters killing them.There are too many examples of well managed private lands where harvest management is implemented with public land pieces immediately adjacent to them to dispute the efficacy of harvest reduction. The better hunting is simply across the line on private. It's not this great mystery as to why the higher quality hunting is on the private. It's because they don't have every Tom, Dick and Harry filling their limits over there. Clearly, part of the solution to the wild turkey's decline, particularly on public ground, is to simply reduce the number of turkeys Tom, Dick and Harry can kill on public lands I have listened to multiple podcasts with popular turkey hunting figures who want to fight bag limit reductions/shortened seasons and I've read hundreds of comments on Facebook boards fighting against these ideas. Meanwhile, these guys are all running around public lands filling their limits promoting public land as it continues to become depleted..... The status quo is simply not working in most parts of the country and I'm glad to see AL taking steps in the right direction. I have some friends who are stakeholders down there who lobbied hard for a 3 bird bag limit and a March 25th start date; they were optimistic that some change was implemented instead of maintaining the status quo but the fight is not over.While I agree that population decline is a multi-dimensional issue, what's best for the wild turkey certainly isn't good for the turkey hunter right now. Contrary to popular opinion, these are mutually exclusive things and there are some guys in this community who need to start to realize that. I'll be in a southern state next week and I'll be happy to kill one turkey(instead of 2) and drive home; I think the turkeys would be a whole lot better off if more people did the same. I would like to see how many turkey hunters there are down there in Alabama , compared to how many turkeys?
Quote from: Kyle_Ott on March 10, 2021, 08:19:00 PMI don't have a stake in the southeast's current situation but I know there's a portion of turkey hunters who seem to be the only fools on earth who don't believe that bag limit reductions and shortened seasons would help more turkeys survive each year.When goose or duck numbers go down, USFWS reduce the limits and shorten the seasons. When whitetail deer numbers go down, state agencies decrease the bag limits. Wild turkey numbers were highest when we had considerably fewer hunters killing them.There are too many examples of well managed private lands where harvest management is implemented with public land pieces immediately adjacent to them to dispute the efficacy of harvest reduction. The better hunting is simply across the line on private. It's not this great mystery as to why the higher quality hunting is on the private. It's because they don't have every Tom, Dick and Harry filling their limits over there. Clearly, part of the solution to the wild turkey's decline, particularly on public ground, is to simply reduce the number of turkeys Tom, Dick and Harry can kill on public lands I have listened to multiple podcasts with popular turkey hunting figures who want to fight bag limit reductions/shortened seasons and I've read hundreds of comments on Facebook boards fighting against these ideas. Meanwhile, these guys are all running around public lands filling their limits promoting public land as it continues to become depleted..... The status quo is simply not working in most parts of the country and I'm glad to see AL taking steps in the right direction. I have some friends who are stakeholders down there who lobbied hard for a 3 bird bag limit and a March 25th start date; they were optimistic that some change was implemented instead of maintaining the status quo but the fight is not over.While I agree that population decline is a multi-dimensional issue, what's best for the wild turkey certainly isn't good for the turkey hunter right now. Contrary to popular opinion, these are mutually exclusive things and there are some guys in this community who need to start to realize that. I'll be in a southern state next week and I'll be happy to kill one turkey(instead of 2) and drive home; I think the turkeys would be a whole lot better off if more people did the same.
Quote from: Sixes on March 12, 2021, 11:37:02 AMCovid, over the limit, too many move ins and out of state hunters, etc still doesn't explain what happened to the hens.No hens in the state of Georgia have been legally killed and very few are poached, but they have all but disappeared in a lot of areas.My club on the GA/AL line has a bunch of birds and has zero agriculture, zero predator control and the population has been stable for years. Same on another tract that I hunt in mid GA, no AG, no predator hunters, but a big population. Same where I work, stable to growing population.The big quail plantation and the surrounding area with heavy AG, heavy predator trapping and prime habitat that I keep talking about and it is full of quail, but the turkeys died of something.The difference in the quail plantation and the other clubs that I hunt is there is an abundance of hens on the non AG area tracts.I have no idea what happened or what will help, but reducing the number of gobblers or time allowed to hunt them will not effect the number of hens and in turn, the number of their poults.