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Started by BDeal, March 31, 2016, 09:59:48 AM
Quote from: C. Brumfiel on April 20, 2016, 09:43:43 PMI live in MD now, but when I lived and hunted in NC there was less hunting pressure where I hunted which would allow you to get closer to the roost. In MD, the hunting pressure is higher which is why I have adapted my hunting strategy to trying to catch them on their travels. The guys that I've talked to this week who were hunting the roost tree said that the birds always went away from them off the roost. I haven't shot anything this year yet, but I have gotten very close. I have noticed that each gobbler that I was on was with a hen and every time that I called she led him away from me even though they were heading my direction before I started calling. I may have to adapt my strategy even further.
Quote from: VaTuRkStOmPeR on April 20, 2016, 10:45:47 PMQuote from: C. Brumfiel on April 20, 2016, 09:43:43 PMI live in MD now, but when I lived and hunted in NC there was less hunting pressure where I hunted which would allow you to get closer to the roost. In MD, the hunting pressure is higher which is why I have adapted my hunting strategy to trying to catch them on their travels. The guys that I've talked to this week who were hunting the roost tree said that the birds always went away from them off the roost. I haven't shot anything this year yet, but I have gotten very close. I have noticed that each gobbler that I was on was with a hen and every time that I called she led him away from me even though they were heading my direction before I started calling. I may have to adapt my strategy even further.Roost hunting doesn't always mean calling. It sometimes means being so tight to them in the tree that they fly down in gun range and you shoot them within 5 seconds of being on the ground.Being tight on the roost is NEVER a position of strategic disadvantage. If you kill right at fly down, you've beaten everyone else to the bird and you're on your way to breakfast before 630, if you don't and the bird flies in a different direction, he has now told you where to go to kill him.In the last week, my brother and I have only killed 5 gobblers (several on public out west, KY and VA). The reason I say this is because you say you haven't converted since Maryland opened on Monday and the hens are taking them away from you.It's not the roost that is your problem. The issue is you're not tight enough to it to put yourself in the game. Now, I'm not sure if you're hunting western Maryland, the eastern shore around talbot/chestertown or down towards Cambridge or Salisbury but I've hunted all of those areas and still do. 100 yards is 50 yards too far right now and you should strongly be considering gobbling at the gobblers and jake yelping.Flocks with multiple gobblers and lots of hens are abundant throughout Maryland, Virginia and Kentucky at the moment and you aren't going to call flocks like that long distances under most circumstances.Either get in tight and be in their back pocket at fly down or wait for them to flydown and then crawl within 55-60 yards and present them with a situation that they can't refuse to investigate.
Quote from: Farmboy27 on April 21, 2016, 07:20:33 PMQuote from: VaTuRkStOmPeR on April 20, 2016, 10:45:47 PMQuote from: C. Brumfiel on April 20, 2016, 09:43:43 PMI live in MD now, but when I lived and hunted in NC there was less hunting pressure where I hunted which would allow you to get closer to the roost. In MD, the hunting pressure is higher which is why I have adapted my hunting strategy to trying to catch them on their travels. The guys that I've talked to this week who were hunting the roost tree said that the birds always went away from them off the roost. I haven't shot anything this year yet, but I have gotten very close. I have noticed that each gobbler that I was on was with a hen and every time that I called she led him away from me even though they were heading my direction before I started calling. I may have to adapt my strategy even further.Roost hunting doesn't always mean calling. It sometimes means being so tight to them in the tree that they fly down in gun range and you shoot them within 5 seconds of being on the ground.Being tight on the roost is NEVER a position of strategic disadvantage. If you kill right at fly down, you've beaten everyone else to the bird and you're on your way to breakfast before 630, if you don't and the bird flies in a different direction, he has now told you where to go to kill him.In the last week, my brother and I have only killed 5 gobblers (several on public out west, KY and VA). The reason I say this is because you say you haven't converted since Maryland opened on Monday and the hens are taking them away from you.It's not the roost that is your problem. The issue is you're not tight enough to it to put yourself in the game. Now, I'm not sure if you're hunting western Maryland, the eastern shore around talbot/chestertown or down towards Cambridge or Salisbury but I've hunted all of those areas and still do. 100 yards is 50 yards too far right now and you should strongly be considering gobbling at the gobblers and jake yelping.Flocks with multiple gobblers and lots of hens are abundant throughout Maryland, Virginia and Kentucky at the moment and you aren't going to call flocks like that long distances under most circumstances.Either get in tight and be in their back pocket at fly down or wait for them to flydown and then crawl within 55-60 yards and present them with a situation that they can't refuse to investigate.There are situations where setting up tight to the roost can be a wrong move. What if a bird is roosted on a ridge top and flys straight to a field at the base of the ridge. You just made a long walk up hill in the dark for nothing. How about a bird that flys off the tree and across a creek 75 yards away. By being in tight you just took yourself out of the game. Or a bird that flys from one ridge point to another across a hollow and suddenly he's 300 yards away? The more I think about, there are plenty of times where it pays to not be set up tight. Scouting will help determine whether a tight setup will be to your advantage. But being in his bedroom isn't always the best option!