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Started by Longshanks, June 23, 2011, 03:48:22 PM
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.
Quote from: Spuriosity on June 25, 2011, 07:15:39 PMQuote from: Longshanks on June 24, 2011, 11:10:30 AMThought provoking subject is it not?? I hunt for so many more reasons than eating Wild game. The outdoor experience, thrill of the hunt, fellowship, time with family, introducing new hunters to the sport, teaching kids about the outdoors, and the list goes on and on..eating wild game is just a bonus and in my experience more important to the overall hunting experience than it is "what the family prefers to eat." I have a buddy claiming his wife prefers wildgame over anything else..I said "you want to bet". We took our wifes to Ruth Chris steak house and grilled venison tenderloin the next night. After the venison dinner we asked them which meal tasted better?? They said "are you kidding??" the venison wasn't even a comparison to the fillets we had the night before..she hated to hurt his feelings but this "wildgame preference" was all in his head. He was acting like he was the great white hunter and his family was enduring eating wildgame all the time to appease him. Gee. Compared to the prices charged at Ruth's Chris, my $50/lb venison tenderloin is sounding better and better.
Quote from: Longshanks on June 24, 2011, 11:10:30 AMThought provoking subject is it not?? I hunt for so many more reasons than eating Wild game. The outdoor experience, thrill of the hunt, fellowship, time with family, introducing new hunters to the sport, teaching kids about the outdoors, and the list goes on and on..eating wild game is just a bonus and in my experience more important to the overall hunting experience than it is "what the family prefers to eat." I have a buddy claiming his wife prefers wildgame over anything else..I said "you want to bet". We took our wifes to Ruth Chris steak house and grilled venison tenderloin the next night. After the venison dinner we asked them which meal tasted better?? They said "are you kidding??" the venison wasn't even a comparison to the fillets we had the night before..she hated to hurt his feelings but this "wildgame preference" was all in his head. He was acting like he was the great white hunter and his family was enduring eating wildgame all the time to appease him.
Quote from: VaTuRkStOmPeR on June 26, 2011, 11:03:45 AMif they are in tight on me (sub 20 yards), I shoot them right above the beard in the body (facing straight at me) or between the wing butt and the wattles if they are walking broadside to me.if they are out past 20-25 yards I shoot right at the feathers where they meet the neck.i shoot much lower than most guys do when they are too close but i don't see much meat get wasted. my patterns inside 15 yards are the size of a quarter dollar.it may not be a palletable or acceptable mentality for some, but it has proven highly effective for me.
Quote from: Spuriosity on June 27, 2011, 01:23:29 PMQuote from: Longshanks on June 27, 2011, 11:34:52 AMI've killed way over 100 longbeards in my life and have seen at least twice that many die in front of gun. When people with 40-50 years of turkey hunting wisdom try to share their experience with you might want to at least have an open mind and consider what they are saying..last time..a little common sense. Most of the turkey guns that folks shoot these days will put the entire pattern in a 10" circle at 20yds. At 15 yards and less that pattern can be 6-8 inches. Being satisfied that half your pattern is all you need..you would only have 3 or so inches as a margin for error..if you don't think you could get off target 3 inches or so on a moving target you are very mistaken..it wouldn't matter if you slept at the gun range and shot every day..Easy big fellow. Ronnie likes to shoot them in the head and stacks 'em like cordwood every year. And my family really and truly prefers venison to beef. It's going to be o.k., really.
Quote from: Longshanks on June 27, 2011, 11:34:52 AMI've killed way over 100 longbeards in my life and have seen at least twice that many die in front of gun. When people with 40-50 years of turkey hunting wisdom try to share their experience with you might want to at least have an open mind and consider what they are saying..last time..a little common sense. Most of the turkey guns that folks shoot these days will put the entire pattern in a 10" circle at 20yds. At 15 yards and less that pattern can be 6-8 inches. Being satisfied that half your pattern is all you need..you would only have 3 or so inches as a margin for error..if you don't think you could get off target 3 inches or so on a moving target you are very mistaken..it wouldn't matter if you slept at the gun range and shot every day..
Quote from: Reloader on June 26, 2011, 11:08:14 PMIf you miss turkeys by aiming at the head, you need to spend many hours on the range.I'd say out of the last 30 turkeys I've killed in the past few years, the only high miss was because the turkey was too close and it happened too fast. Luckily I killed that bird with a follow up.There is absolutely nothing wrong with aiming at the turkeys head. I could care less that part of the pattern is going over his head, part of it is going left or right as well, big deal. That's why we have patterns and not single projectiles.Pellets in the breast would be far more common if I where to aim at the base of the neck. More beards would get slaughtered as well. I aim at their head and frequently get pellets in the top of the breast. I also commonly get a pellet in the base of the beard knocking a few strands out. Aiming lower would increase both.The beauty is everyone can aim where they chose, none are wrong. Reloader
Quote from: Reloader on June 27, 2011, 04:49:59 PMLongshanks,I've killed piles of the rascals as well and called many more to the gun. I'm not knocking your experience nor your aiming point, just simply stating there's more than one way to skin a cat Keep shooting them in the neck and I'll keep holding that dot as close as I can to the noggin and we'll both keep stacking them up.The only time I ask folks to shoot them at the feather line is with newbies or kids on close range birds and neither should have a super tight turkey rig in their hands IMO.VA, I agree with you on the close shots, I prefer them out past 20 myself. Killed a nice 3yo a couple seasons back at 12yds and had one slug like hole through his neck right below his head. Call it lucky I suppose.Have to agree with you fellas that like the wild turkey taste over the steroidballs. Seems everyone gobbles up the wild turkey when we cook them. Can't say that about the store bought birds at Christmas time, but the dogs sure like the leftovers. I prefer venison to beef as well. Luckily we don't have to buy any meat with the cattle farm in the family and all the big game adventures every year.Ya'll have a good one,Reloader
Quote from: Gobble! on June 27, 2011, 05:54:57 PMWhy so much anger over shotting a turkey?I hope I stay young and dont get old and mad about everything like you older folks I shoot for the head. When I patterened my gun. I sighted it in so the top of my 10" circle touches the bottom of where I am aiming. That way half the patterned dosent "fly over his head.I guess you might as well say I aim for the middle of the neck.