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Started by drenalinld, June 14, 2011, 07:39:13 AM
Quote from: gobbler74 on June 14, 2011, 08:59:54 AMI was with a fairly aggressive redhead once upon a time. Them were the good ole days. Haven't had a crack at any white heads yet, guess its just a matter of time.
Quote from: Covehnter on June 14, 2011, 09:17:59 AMQuote from: gobbler74 on June 14, 2011, 08:59:54 AMI was with a fairly aggressive redhead once upon a time. Them were the good ole days. Haven't had a crack at any white heads yet, guess its just a matter of time.
Quote from: davisd9 on June 14, 2011, 08:53:32 AMSo by looking at the head of these two toms, which would you say would have been the more dominant bird? They were shot is separate years but talking about head color these two are different. Both had wear on wing feathers from strutting and both gobbled on roost and ground.
Quote from: TRKYHTR on June 14, 2011, 09:53:36 AMDepends on what you mean by dominance. A turkeys head will change color per his mood. It's been my experience that a gobblers head changes to white when he is getting ready to breed a hen. My Jake, Buddy, his head is red alot whenhe is agressive towards other animals or when he wants to fight but when he is strutting trying to get his hen to lay down for him it gets whiter. Then when he gets on top of her it almost goes completely white. A dead gobblers head doesn't change colors much. They usually stay close to the color they were when they were shot. With exception to rigamortis(sp) and blood pooling. You will notice when most turkeys are fighting, for dominance, their heads are not white. Thats said if there are several gobblers together usually the one that has the whitest head is the most dominant because he is the one that is going to breed.TRKYHTR