With youth hunt day coming fast I made a gutsy decision and do some 0-dark thirty ghost recon manuvers on Saturday morning. I had my heart set on setting up on the ridge top birds. Walking to a good listening position I heard some other birds gobbling in an are where l have heard them in the past. I am not 100 % sure but I feel that these were actually the ridgetops birds, but found a new area. Either way I decided to go in Seal team six style and observe what they did after fly down.
I hit the creek bottom and sat down below on the lower hill so the birds would not be able to see me. They were hammering, and I mean hammering. I took some videos on my phone and will post if they ever upload. I picked a large tree in some brush and just sat there motionless.
It sounded to me that there were 3 young birds dead in front of me about 80-90 yards, and two long beards each about 100 yards away from the younger birds. I know gobbles are deceiving but this was my analysis. They hit the ground. And a hen behind me in the creek bottom pines started to do a little talking. THe birds were hammring at every sound she made but appeard to be strutting in the clearing on the hill above, out of my sight.
I just sat there and soaked it in but the birds, ended up making a nice circle around to the creek bottom, and hit the lower section of the field that you can not see from the top. THey were hammering at the hen like crazy.
THe hen flew down and met them in the field. I waited until they worked out a in the field a little, then snuck out and made a huge dog leg out around them and back to my car.
MY question:
Would you set up in the strutting area they worked for about a half hour or so and try and cut the hen off, or would you go out to the field, where it seems like they wanted to go?
On my dog leg walk I could hear them gobbling in that field bottom, all the way until I got back to my car. So roughly an hour in that lower field area. The field is at the bottom of a large hill and is secluded.
I am torn on trying to cut the hen off, before the birds get to here, or hit the field and wait for them.
THoughts?