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Started by Dhamilton1, January 26, 2022, 05:36:43 PM
Quote from: WV Flopper on January 26, 2022, 08:55:11 PM Teach me. Why do you think "Now is the answer"? Typically, now, birds are in winter flocks, shortly they will start dispersal. Meaning, those 10 gobblers you see grouped together now may be scattered 40 miles apart 3 months from now, or more. If you scout known spring season areas and expand from there you will have more success. Just before your spring season, throughout your season, and shortly after is the time to scout areas you can access to hunt. Turkeys do travel, they do flock, and they do disperse. I do not stop scouting for turkeys.
Quote from: GobbleNut on January 27, 2022, 08:32:41 AMAs usual, everybody is correct in their response to the question...even though it sometimes seems contradictory. Everything we discuss is often relative to the specific place that each of us hunts. The basic elements are generally the same, but the application of all the various tactics and approaches can vary a bunch based on where you hunt. As for the question at hand as to when and where to start scouting? The basic two-word response you will see a lot in these debates is "it depends". Assuming you already have some idea of where turkeys live in your part of the world, my two fundamental comments on this subject would be 1) when looking for turkeys to hunt, it is always better to be out somewhere that you think turkeys live, regardless of the time of year, than it is to be sitting on the couch; 2) for spring gobbler hunting, you are much better off trying to find your gobblers a couple of weeks prior to, and during, the season when they have reliably started gobbling in response to the spring breeding urge, than you are any other time of the year. Again, these are general comments. Applying my own experiences where I live and hunt, I have places that I can walk in the first morning of the season and know there are going to be gobblers there and know pretty much where they are going to be. I also have places that I need to confirm prior to the season if there are gobblers there because sometimes they are...and sometimes they aren't. Regardless of those two circumstances, that confirmation is based on hearing turkeys gobbling more than any other factor...and the very best time to hear them gobbling is after they have gotten into "breeding mode" in the spring (and furthermore, the very best time to hear that gobbling is at first light in the morning).Having said all of the above, there are a lot of "if's, but's, and and's" that complicate matters. Each of us must sort those out for ourselves based on our particular circumstances. Bottom line is, scout when you can but if your time is somehow limited, focus on those times when those gobblers will be reliably telling you EXACTLY where they are at (as noted above).