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Started by RiverRoost, April 11, 2023, 10:43:47 AM
Quote from: g8rvet on April 11, 2023, 01:39:12 PMI agree a late morning/early afternoon bird is more likely to want to play - at least that has been my experience. Not so much when close to roost time. How did you strike him? My approach is different (less aggressive) if he answered a call vs a shock gobble response. I think you can move closer to a shock gobble, since he is not likely already on his way. I had 2 longbeards answer my box call one time and I had to move to them to set up (no choice with the situation) and before I could sit down they had come in on a dead run from 100 yards+ away (literally were racing each other) and busted me before I could sit down. There are so many choices you have to make for it to all come together and I play the "what-if" game a lot, but the best you can do is to make the choice that feels right. You just have to be right once, he has to be right all the time. If you did not scare him off, you now have valuable intel. Stick with it and get him.
Quote from: Marc on April 11, 2023, 05:11:45 PMI have had zero luck shock-gobbling in the afternoon. So when I strike a bird, it is generally with a hen call.If I strike a bird 400-500 yards away, I might try and make up some ground (say half ways). I make a quick decision on where I am going, and how to get there without being seen (using the terrain to hide me); and move fast to get there.If I strike a bird at 200 yards away, I look for spot to sit for a bit... Wait... And call again a few minutes later, to see where he is now. If he has gained ground, I sit tight, maybe reposition slightly depending on the direction I think he is taking. If he did not move, I try and gain some ground (maybe half way)... If he is quiet, I sit tight for a bit with some quiet calling, interspersed with some occasional agressive calling. I have had a lot of birds gobble, and come in quiet in the afternoon, and if I do not know where he is, I do not want to bump him. I have also had birds come in FAST in the afternoon, which is why I am less likely to make aggressive moves towards birds later in the day.If I strike two birds, I might try and get mid-way between them. Sometimes one will come, and the other will not... "I feel" like if I get two birds going, there is a better chance one of them will travel a bit further due to competition/agression.As to your situation, sounds like you possibly made a mistake in setup location? I am hunting hills, and prefer to set up on a saddle or point (as soon as he breaches the top, he will be in range)... Make sure he does not have to cross somthing he will not want to cross. If no decoys, open areas are a poor choice, as birds will hang as soon as they should see a hen and don't. If I can see the bird, I generally stop calling... Sometimes they will come in fast, and those last few steps to get into range, painfully slow.If a bird is in range and coming towards me, I let him keep coming. If he changes direction, he gets shot... If he is going behind an obstruction, he gets shot.