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Started by ScottTaulbee, January 24, 2023, 10:47:25 AM
Quote from: ScottTaulbee on January 26, 2023, 07:04:20 AMI was doing some more thinking and i just remembered what I'd consider to be the number one reason for my success over the years. Confidence. Having confidence in yourself, your calls, and your ability has helped me kill and call in a pile of birds for others. When I sit down to a turkey, in my mind, I'm eating that bird. And it seems to make me stay focused, give my best calls, and use every sense I have to get him. And if it doesn't work in that bird, that day. Then I've gained a bunch of intel I'll use on him the next day. And go find another one. I had one hang up a couple years ago about 80 yards out, National forest land, open woods on top of a ridge that made a horseshoe, with a finger ridge off it, I was in the curve of the horseshoe because I figured he'd come right around there and be at 30 yards, him being an old gobbler, came up the thick stuff and hung up on the finger ridge. I was sitting behind a tree and could see him to my hard right. After home being hung up about 10 minutes, I kept my cool, had confidence in my calls and my set up and gave him the best fighting purr I could on my pot call, he broke and came running and I got him at 30 yards when he hit that curve. There's not a doubt in my mind if I would have had second thoughts about any of that, I'd have not gotten that bird. He was the only one on that mountain while 6 were gobbling on the next mountain over. Sticking to my guns and having confidence kept me from chasing the others and brought that bird home. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: Tom007 on January 26, 2023, 07:12:37 AMQuote from: ScottTaulbee on January 26, 2023, 07:04:20 AMI was doing some more thinking and i just remembered what I'd consider to be the number one reason for my success over the years. Confidence. Having confidence in yourself, your calls, and your ability has helped me kill and call in a pile of birds for others. When I sit down to a turkey, in my mind, I'm eating that bird. And it seems to make me stay focused, give my best calls, and use every sense I have to get him. And if it doesn't work in that bird, that day. Then I've gained a bunch of intel I'll use on him the next day. And go find another one. I had one hang up a couple years ago about 80 yards out, National forest land, open woods on top of a ridge that made a horseshoe, with a finger ridge off it, I was in the curve of the horseshoe because I figured he'd come right around there and be at 30 yards, him being an old gobbler, came up the thick stuff and hung up on the finger ridge. I was sitting behind a tree and could see him to my hard right. After home being hung up about 10 minutes, I kept my cool, had confidence in my calls and my set up and gave him the best fighting purr I could on my pot call, he broke and came running and I got him at 30 yards when he hit that curve. There's not a doubt in my mind if I would have had second thoughts about any of that, I'd have not gotten that bird. He was the only one on that mountain while 6 were gobbling on the next mountain over. Sticking to my guns and having confidence kept me from chasing the others and brought that bird home. Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkThe facts in this great story is evidence you know quite a few "Tips and Tricks" yourself. Well done, thanks for sharing....
Quote from: Skeeter1 on May 13, 2023, 11:06:34 AMScott : This is great advice. Confidence is what has kept me going. I just started hunting turkeys 3 years ago and all three years got busted by smart Toms coming in and catching my slightest moves. This past April I changed my tactics and got my first turkey from a ground blind. I hunt by myself and have read a lot of articles about turkey hunting and am still learning from forums like this one. But the main thing is to have confidence in your self and equipment and keep a positive attitude. Keep trying and never give up and maybe your day will come like mine did this year. I just cooked the breasts on the grill and they were great. Still reliving that hunt and can't wait until next season.
Quote from: Turkeybutt on June 13, 2023, 06:12:35 AMI'll add my two cents for what it's worth.Patience and Persistence has killed many a bird. • Listen more and call less. • Soft "Come hither" calling is more advantages. • Scratch some leaves, sound like a turkey feeding. • Listen, but keep a keen eye for any movement. • When you are about ready to give up and call it quits for the day give it another 45 minutes or so. Get comfortable and relax. • Buy a lounger, good chair or a good seat cushion. • The more comfortable you are the less fidgeting you are going to do. This will make your hunt more enjoyable, and you will stay in the woods longer.Know what you and your equipment can do! • Pattern your shotgun. • Know your limits and that of your weapon and ammo you are using. • In the off season practice your calling.Enjoy your time in the woods, don't make it stressful as each hunt is memorable in it's own right. Turkey hunting is a chess game. You move, he counters. He makes a move, you counter. Each of you are making calculated moves with full awareness of the likely outcome of those decisions. • Maybe he finds a mate. • Maybe you kill a bird.Relax and enjoy the game!
Quote from: Greg Massey on June 13, 2023, 09:36:56 AMI agree. great advice from some awesome people... Enjoy yourself and respect the animals your chasing ... It's not always KILL KILL KILL ...
Quote from: Tom007 on June 13, 2023, 08:40:42 AMQuote from: Turkeybutt on June 13, 2023, 06:12:35 AMI'll add my two cents for what it's worth.Patience and Persistence has killed many a bird. • Listen more and call less. • Soft "Come hither" calling is more advantages. • Scratch some leaves, sound like a turkey feeding. • Listen, but keep a keen eye for any movement. • When you are about ready to give up and call it quits for the day give it another 45 minutes or so. Get comfortable and relax. • Buy a lounger, good chair or a good seat cushion. • The more comfortable you are the less fidgeting you are going to do. This will make your hunt more enjoyable, and you will stay in the woods longer.Know what you and your equipment can do! • Pattern your shotgun. • Know your limits and that of your weapon and ammo you are using. • In the off season practice your calling.Enjoy your time in the woods, don't make it stressful as each hunt is memorable in it's own right. Turkey hunting is a chess game. You move, he counters. He makes a move, you counter. Each of you are making calculated moves with full awareness of the likely outcome of those decisions. • Maybe he finds a mate. • Maybe you kill a bird.Relax and enjoy the game!Well said, great advice!