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Started by Longshanks, June 23, 2011, 03:48:22 PM
Quote from: JUGHEAD on June 23, 2011, 04:10:26 PMI agree with everything you wrote...other than the whole butterball tastes better than wild statement.
Quote from: Longshanks on June 23, 2011, 04:24:21 PMIve eaten wild turkey all over US and some prepared by chefs..I've never tasted a wild turkey that if a butter ball were cooked the same way it wouldn't taste better. Try this..bake a whole wild turkey in the oven and a butterball the same way. First try the legs as an appetizer and tell me how that goes..Serve both turkeys to your family and see which one they like. It takes so much seasoning to make a wild turkey taste good it's ridiculous. Wild turkey is dryer, tougher, and has a wild game taste.
Quote from: ILIKEHEVI-13 on June 23, 2011, 03:56:17 PMYour exactly right. I do the exact same.
Quote from: chatterbox on June 23, 2011, 04:52:16 PMPut the crosshairs on the neck right above the wattles is the best shot placement IMO.
Quote from: Reloader on June 23, 2011, 06:14:26 PMI'm a noggin shooter.I shoot a good bit with shotguns and rifles and tend to be pretty calm when it comes time on big game animals, but when it comes to turkey about all I can tell you is I put it on their noggin. May be the beak, the left eye, waddles, or maybe the snood, I'm so dang shook when it happens that I just put the dot in that general vicinity and let 'er rip The red makes a good bullseye. I'd like to say I take perfect aim and place the center of the ten inch from the feathers to the top of the head, but it doesn't seem to work out that way when big tom fever sets in. I guess the practice pays off as it hasn't let me down lately(knock on wood).
Quote from: mossybird on June 23, 2011, 08:25:06 PMI usually aim at the middle of the neck. But if you have your shotgun patterned, you put it anywhere on his head/neck, you will kill him.