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Started by rt2bowhunter, March 12, 2021, 05:21:13 AM
Quote from: Pope n Young on March 17, 2021, 03:38:01 PMI stole this from another guy. Interesting idea...Here's one of mine....Before you laugh and discredit it, just think about it a little....There used to be an old black man that lived out here in our community. He worked for an old lady, taking care of her small cattle operation. He fed the cows, fixed fences, baled hay, all that kind of stuff....The old lady owned a few hundred acres of land, and this old guy was in the woods all the time, keeping up with the fences, so he was always running into turkeys.Anyway, I noticed him cleaning turkeys several times each spring when I'd come out of the woods (my property butts up to the old lady's place on 2 sides). Finally one morning when I saw him out there I wheeled up in there to talk turkey with this old gentleman.We chatted a while, and he informed me he used no calls, decoys, or anything of that nature....I figured he was crawling and bushwacking them, or roost shooting, but this guy was in his 70's, so I felt it wasn't my place to discuss ethics with him. Just before I left, he invited me to go with him the next morning, and he'd show me his little secret....It was an offer I couldn't refuse. The next morning I was there bright and early....We struck out, him in the lead, me following. We got to the top of a big hardwood ridge with an old logging road on top of it, and the road ran out into a small pasture, probably about an acre or so in size. We took a seat right at the pasture edge where the old road came into the field, and waited on daylight....As dawn began to break, sure enough, a gobbler fired off at the other end of the little pasture. I felt certain he would pitch down in the pasture, and meander right up the road towards us. But I didn't plan to do any calling....I wanted to see what the old man had up his sleeve. This bird was really tearing it up, gobbling his head off. Then they started pitching down, and it wasn't one bird, it was three longbeards....Soon as they hit the ground, the old man reached back in his game vest, and pulled out a little "Tony the Tiger" looking stuffed animal. I mean it was glowing orange in color. I was about to die, trying to figure out what in the world he was doing, and then he tossed it out into the edge of the field. It stood out like a turd in a punchbowl....Then he raised his gun up and got ready. Sure enough, a few minutes later, here came the longbeards, headed right to us....All of a sudden, they spied that stuffed animal laying there, and they froze. You could have knocked them over with a feather....They stood there and eyeballed it for about 10 minutes or so, then all of a sudden broke out into a trot, and ran right up on top of the dang thing. They had no idea we were even on the planet with them, they were so engrossed with this orange intruder.....With no fanfare at all, the old man dropped a bomb on one of them. The other two flew out....I was shocked at what I had just witnessed. The old man looked back at me, and said "It works every time, son.".....Anyway, we hit the road to go clean his bird....He asked me if I'd ever noticed how nosy and curious a turkey is. I admitted I had....He said he'd pulled the same trick over the years, with all variety of objects a turkey had never seen. And it worked with all of them. He said he finally decided to use Tony the Tiger exclusively, because he was small, light weight, easy to tote around, and brightly colored....The old man was always out in those woods, and knew where the birds liked to hang out, so he knew where to sit, and then he'd just toss "Ol' Tony" out where the birds could see it. After they put their eyes on it, it was just a matter of time until they'd come to investigate....I'm here to tell you- It worked.That old man died several years ago. I've never shared his secret with anybody....I wouldn't say it's the most ethical way to fool a turkey, but it dang sure gets the job done. I tried it myself one afternoon on a bird that had been giving me fits for weeks. Except I used a big neon green stuffed animal (a frog)....Tossed it out in the field, made a few calls to get the birds attention, as he was a couple of hundred yards away. As soon as he caught sight of it, he locked on to it, and 20 minutes later I shot him at 15 yards.Turkeys are naturally curious animals....If you get in a bind with an old warhorse, give this technique a try. You might be shocked at what develops.
Quote from: GobbleNut on March 18, 2021, 08:44:39 AMQuite the story, and I do find a certain amount of humor and entertainment in it....but when I actually think about it, all this does for me is make me ask why some people hunt turkeys? What is the motivation for shooting a turkey by using any sort of tactic such as this?
Quote from: rt2bowhunter on March 12, 2021, 05:21:13 AM Any tips maybe i'm missing something.