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Started by scoot12, February 23, 2013, 10:00:44 PM
Quote from: pappy on February 24, 2013, 08:14:56 PMI have to say that the high pitch marketing has hurt the hunter more then ity has the call maker. As Doc said, they shock great, but you want that bird to come strolling, I really think it happens with all types of calls over time. I know it has with duck calls, I remember when I made them in the early 90's the fad was changing, from wooden calls to acrylic calls, why? Because contests required loud high pitched hail calls and super fast feed calls and the wooden call was made to call ducks not win ribbons. This in turn has hurt what the hunter thinks he or she is wanting in a call, they believe that the need that "young hen" high pitch, when the tom is looking for maturity, and this is even evident in the contests, just depending on the judge, and the area, and after you listen to 100 calls trying to pick out the best, your ears are eventually going to lean to that "different" sound.....me, I like the old calls and their mellowed sounds. I have several that are made to hunt with, beaten and banged and still producing, but I make what ever the hunter is wanting, that's progress...isn't it?
Quote from: savduck on February 25, 2013, 02:15:27 PM....I often wonder if its more how the sound carries than the pitch or tone. I think tha only after using the trumpets so much last year. I'd have birds gobbling but not doing much. Switch to a trumpet and they start going nuts and coming. That's with soft calling. I was working a bird and had a buddy 300 yards away. I was using trumpet and mouth call. He said he could hear the trumpet but not the mouth call......