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Started by Tom007, January 29, 2023, 07:54:04 AM
Quote from: RutnNStrutn on January 29, 2023, 12:19:45 PMQuote from: GobbleNut on January 29, 2023, 09:26:52 AMI would say my "killing time" generally runs from about an hour after sunrise to about three hours after sunrise. Agreed Sent from my moto z4 using Tapatalk
Quote from: GobbleNut on January 29, 2023, 09:26:52 AMI would say my "killing time" generally runs from about an hour after sunrise to about three hours after sunrise.
Quote from: Bowguy on January 30, 2023, 01:42:47 AMI get a bunch closer. I can almost always see them. This video is how I often set. It's filmed with a zoom but I don't often kill em within 15-20 mins daylight. At times they're feet hit the ground and the gun cracks. I don't get much time in the morning with work. Tom I pm youhttps://youtu.be/kng-mapqNfA
Quote from: Kyle_Ott on February 03, 2023, 03:21:48 PMI come at this from a different perspective from most who have replied to this post.For the last 15+ years we have spent a considerable amount of time roosting turkeys the evening before.In scenarios where I have a roosted gobbler, that turkey dies 70% of the time.The biggest key in my opinion is being extremely tight and tight can be relative to terrain and habitat but generally speaking 125 yards isn't even in the right universe. 100 yards is in the wrong area code. 80 and closer is when things start to shift in your favor.The obvious key to success is leveraging darkness as your primary asset to move in tight. I prefer to be sitting 60-80 yards from the roosted gobbler for at least an hour before light is up especially when I'm moving in on a gobbler on a piece of ground or area I'm totally unfamiliar with. You want to give yourself plenty of time to move under the cover of darkness which means your alarm needs to go off 2 hours before most turkey hunters are even considering getting out of bed.The next consideration when you're that tight to a turkey is whether you can see him in the roost or not. Most of the time, especially in the early/mid season, you're going to be looking at the gobbler in the tree. Calling at that point is not an option (if you hunt without decoys) If youve executed your set up correctly, there's a good chance the gobbler flies down inside gun range. If he doesn't fly down within gun range, you're often so tight to him that calling him the final few yards after he flies down is a relatively simple task. Lastly, if for some reason the set up isn't conducive to calling him inside gun range at that point, you're often in superior position to crawl/move to a new location and kill him from there. There is a large contingent of turkey hunters who will tell you killing turkeys consistently off the roost is a low percentage thing. I'm here to tell you it isn't and I can give you names of a handful of guys who execute with scalpel like precision to carry gobblers out within seconds/minutes of those turkeys hitting the ground.