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Started by NE Gobblers, January 19, 2022, 01:34:20 PM
Quote from: avidnwoutdoorsman on January 20, 2022, 02:48:50 AMYour gonna hopefully get a lot of responses with varying results so I'll through in my two cents.Some context is missing...mainly how far apart were each of these encounters calendar days wise? Doesn't really matter but curious I suppose, though could add some details.I have killed a tom with a tom/strutter decoy from youth season to end of season... that's first weekend of April to the end of May in Washington. I have done the same with a jake decoy, a hen decoy, no decoy.General rule of thumbs or how some would say to play it safe?Earlier in the season birds can still be looking to scrap it out. Using a tom/strutting decoy the first week - two weeks of the season generally will work out... I have found that you will get a lot of bachelor parties of jakes more willing to tustle but most everyone is still in the mood to get down. I will even put a strutting tom out with a jake closer to a lay down hen or the hen(s). Really gets them confused. If a jake is closer to the hen and a tom is standing off to the jake for that hen maybe I have a shot to steal the lady from both of them; is what I think I making the tom think. Mid season.... I would lean more to a tom/strutting decoy if I was going to throw a male decoy out. Why? Toms as eluded to above have often been ganged up on by a group of jakes. So even a single jake decoy could mean trouble for them. They dont know if the rest of his buddies aren't out of site. So for me, its mono y mono if a tom sees a tom. Though at this point I might start thinking about putting the male decoys away and running two hens or a single hen decoy.Late season.... do you.... Its an either or game at this point. Depending on the season and where the birds are in the game it varies with the above but by this point most the hens that are bred are sitting on a nest. The boys in lots of instances have already started to group back up. So if you have to run a tom or a jake pick one and roll with it but definitely run a single hen. At this point if the bird still has fight left in him he's gonna come into almost whatever. MORE likely though he is over it and looking for something easy. SO I would say put them both away and run a single hen decoy.Are you trying to kill a bird or see the show? That will tell you what to try or not try above.Get some 12# mono and tie/tape it to your decoy..... a little movement to the decoy goes a long long ways.If running a strutter bigger doesnt mean better.... I ran a hen fan on my decoy for a long time to make my jake strutter look as small as possible. Something else to try.
Quote from: NE Gobblers on January 19, 2022, 01:34:20 PMThere was at least 7-8 times where I called in toms, and they would get a glimpse of the decoy and stop gobbling and hung up on me every single time.