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Started by Brillo, January 02, 2023, 10:18:24 PM
Quote from: YoungGobbler on July 30, 2023, 02:06:49 PMI have heard this call this season and the way it sounded was as if the tom was starting to be suspicious about my calls... I hunted this area for a few days straight and one morning as i was yelping he was answering at first with gobbles and than he started doing pops... pop, pop, pop... like 15 times straight. It sounded like he wanted to verify if I was a real turkey... I was not confident enough to try to replicate his call but maybe I will try it if some times it happens to me again.
Quote from: GobbleNut on July 30, 2023, 04:51:30 PMQuote from: YoungGobbler on July 30, 2023, 02:06:49 PMI have heard this call this season and the way it sounded was as if the tom was starting to be suspicious about my calls... I hunted this area for a few days straight and one morning as i was yelping he was answering at first with gobbles and than he started doing pops... pop, pop, pop... like 15 times straight. It sounded like he wanted to verify if I was a real turkey... I was not confident enough to try to replicate his call but maybe I will try it if some times it happens to me again.Anybody that has hunted turkeys for very long has had what you describe happen to them. That repeated popping sound you started hearing had probably gone from the "bubble cluck" where-are-you stage to the "alarm putt" stage in your encounter. That gobbler either probably saw something he didn't like...or he did not see something that he thought he ought to be able to see. Regardless, if he started making that sound repeatedly (and moving away from you), there was probably nothing you could do to change his mind at that point. Maybe....but probably not. The use of the bubble cluck (where-are-you cluck) can work wonders in certain situations, but once a gobbler gets into the alarm putting stage, your chances are generally fading fast. Those repeated sharp putts are sounds that none of us want to hear...
Quote from: YoungGobbler on July 30, 2023, 04:58:17 PMI started hearing this pop pop and the gobbler was still roosted. Felt like it was also a bit of an alarm call also... And it was late season, had hunted the area a bit.
Quote from: GobbleNut on July 30, 2023, 05:14:47 PMQuote from: YoungGobbler on July 30, 2023, 04:58:17 PMI started hearing this pop pop and the gobbler was still roosted. Felt like it was also a bit of an alarm call also... And it was late season, had hunted the area a bit.Interesting. It does sound like alarm putting, which would make me think the gobbler probably saw or perhaps heard something he got suspicious about. In those cases, turkeys will sometimes stay on the roost longer than anticipated, and/or when they fly down, they will fly away from the source causing their suspicion. Turkeys do often cluck when getting ready to fly down, and fly-down cackles often include fast clucking. However, what you indicate you heard does not seem to fit that description to me. In addition, turkeys that have been hunted hard can get to a point where they become suspicious about just about everything that happens around them...