Just thinking about hens and how they sound, especially since I'm rebuilding my call arsenal.
This year every hen I heard was very clear sounding. I never heard an aggressive hen and only heard one cutt a few times. I've been calling turkeys for a long time and like most have heard them sound coarse with a lost of nasal, medium pitch with a lot of rasp or as previously described, clean.
Including myself, have always heard the variations associated with the age of hen. Young tend to be high and clear with older hens gaining rasp and getting deeper in tone.
I'm beginning to believe that's not quite the case. I'm thinking hens change their tones to match their emotion. People change their voice based off emotion, it's easy to find examples of a person uttering the exact same words but different tone based off situation and emotion.
Over the years, I've called in many hens all the way to my boots using aggressive cutts and the hen responding in kind. When I've done this later in the morning, it would be just me and the hen going at it with no other birds responding. The hen was always alone and had some serious rasp. After the encounters I would move on and within 100 yards or so flush the hen off of her nest. I'm certain that's why she responded the way she did, it was her territory and I was intruding. I can think of this happening on 5 or 6 occasions and the hens always sound the same.
I've also noticed hens with gobblers tend to sound more aggressive but don't always crank up and come in. Hens going to gobblers with few hens in the area have seemed to sound more passive and call sparingly on their way to a gobbler.
I'm not saying every situation always dictates how a hen will sound. I'm just thinking that the chances of these situations having the same age class hen is not likely.
I would like to hear folks thoughts, especially those who have a few decades under their belt.