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Started by 10point, March 03, 2013, 05:06:41 PM
Quote from: guesswho on March 05, 2013, 08:11:51 AMQuote from: atoler on March 04, 2013, 11:29:11 PMWhy would you think you typically have birds hang up in timber? just curious, my experience has been that field birds hang up worse than a bird in the woods. Birds in the woods can't see a couple hundred yards, but a field bird can.Blow downs, creeks, old fence, dominant boundry ect. can cause a timber bird to hang up. I have have even heard of a shadow causing one to hang up, though I haven't personally run into that yet that I know of.Quote from: atoler on March 04, 2013, 11:35:10 PMthere are a lot of turkey killers who move slowly and wait patiently, and there are a lot who move quickly and often. Its personal preference, and accross the board, its equally affective. On a bird you have already located and are messing with I'd take that equally effective challenge any day. Being stuck on one piece of property for an entire season is another example where I'd take that challenge. About the only scenario where I think it might be equally effective would be if you had multiple large property's that you could pound day in day out. I'm not saying running and gunning isn't effective, just that the situation needs to favor that style.
Quote from: atoler on March 04, 2013, 11:29:11 PMWhy would you think you typically have birds hang up in timber? just curious, my experience has been that field birds hang up worse than a bird in the woods. Birds in the woods can't see a couple hundred yards, but a field bird can.
Quote from: atoler on March 04, 2013, 11:35:10 PMthere are a lot of turkey killers who move slowly and wait patiently, and there are a lot who move quickly and often. Its personal preference, and accross the board, its equally affective.
Quote from: ridgerunner on March 05, 2013, 06:04:36 AMQuote from: atoler on March 04, 2013, 11:35:10 PMQuote from: guesswho on March 04, 2013, 07:51:46 PMDon't be afraid to move on a timber turkey. Just be slow and pay attention with your ears as well as your eye's. A lot of times you will hear drumming or walking before you actually get a visual. The key is go slow and pay attention to everything going on around you, at least twice before you make the next move. Squirrels, woodpeckers, bluejays, and crow's will tell on a turkey in a heartbeat.I agree with most of what you said, I'll add, don't be afraid to take a bit more time and get the setup right the first time either. there are a lot of turkey killers who move slowly and wait patiently, and there are a lot who move quickly and often. Its personal preference, and accross the board, its equally affective. I will say that a lot depends on how much ground you have to cover, and your experience level. For a newer hunter, slow and subtle is probably more successful than run and gun. There is probably a happy median that I don't have the patience for.How many yrs have you been hunting son? You seem to have a whole bunch of experience
Quote from: atoler on March 04, 2013, 11:35:10 PMQuote from: guesswho on March 04, 2013, 07:51:46 PMDon't be afraid to move on a timber turkey. Just be slow and pay attention with your ears as well as your eye's. A lot of times you will hear drumming or walking before you actually get a visual. The key is go slow and pay attention to everything going on around you, at least twice before you make the next move. Squirrels, woodpeckers, bluejays, and crow's will tell on a turkey in a heartbeat.I agree with most of what you said, I'll add, don't be afraid to take a bit more time and get the setup right the first time either. there are a lot of turkey killers who move slowly and wait patiently, and there are a lot who move quickly and often. Its personal preference, and accross the board, its equally affective. I will say that a lot depends on how much ground you have to cover, and your experience level. For a newer hunter, slow and subtle is probably more successful than run and gun. There is probably a happy median that I don't have the patience for.
Quote from: guesswho on March 04, 2013, 07:51:46 PMDon't be afraid to move on a timber turkey. Just be slow and pay attention with your ears as well as your eye's. A lot of times you will hear drumming or walking before you actually get a visual. The key is go slow and pay attention to everything going on around you, at least twice before you make the next move. Squirrels, woodpeckers, bluejays, and crow's will tell on a turkey in a heartbeat.
Quote from: atoler on March 05, 2013, 11:54:05 PMI guess I was comparing my version of big woods. I typically hunt large tracts of public land with a few scattered parcels of private land mixed in to the equation. I step foot on probably 10 or more tracts of land each year, a couple being only a few hundred acres but most being very big. From the posters initial wording, I took it as a big block of public woods....... If you're hunting only one small tract all season, and hunting it a lot, then yes, I think being patient and not risking bumping birds is important. If you're stuck on one bird, then yes taking a slow approach is best. I try not to let myself get hung up on any one bird for more than 2 or 3 days, I would rather leave him and go kill some other birds, then come back later in the season to see if he is ready to play.