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Started by Meleagris gallopavo, April 05, 2023, 08:55:52 AM
Quote from: silvestris on April 05, 2023, 09:14:07 AMQuaver.
Quote from: Greg Massey on April 05, 2023, 09:24:35 AMSoft cluck and purr ... may add soft yelp or 2 ...
Quote from: Meleagris gallopavo on April 05, 2023, 09:31:46 AMQuote from: silvestris on April 05, 2023, 09:14:07 AMQuaver.Not sure how a turkey quavers. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: mountainhunter1 on April 05, 2023, 03:20:32 PMThere is never any perfect answer, but I try to call to him early on and then begin to shut down as he closes the gap. If he is coming, just let him keep doing so. The one thing about calling to a bird if he is close - if you can see him, he can also see to where you are and expects to see a hen moving around where that hen noise is coming from. Once he gets into sight, silence is your best friend. You can still scratch in the leaves if need be, but if you are making hen sounds in sight of him, he expects to see a hen and will 99.9 percent of the time not be good with not seeing that if he is hearing hen talk no matter how soft it may be. If you are using a hen decoy, you can ignore some of that sentiment. That is why I try to set up so that when I can see him, I can kill him. That way I can still call to him all the way up to that moment when he appears and is in range of my shotgun. But even then, if he is coming - let him come and let silence be your best friend and maybe just scratch in the leaves if you feel that you need to give him something. When I became a professional leaf scratcher, my success went way up more so than any last little sound that I could give him with my calls.
Quote from: mountainhunter1 on April 05, 2023, 09:33:26 PMIn my part of the country, the birds used to tear the woods up. In recent years, hens are very limited in their vocalizations most of the time. One exception is when you see a large flock and then at times the hens will get pretty vocal at times. I think they feel safer in large groups. I have wondered exactly why hens just don't talk as much as they used to. Two things I think contribute to this, even though it is not likely the whole picture. First of all - This change (at least from what I could see), seemed to coincide with the advent of custom calls and hunting videos where guys were cackling and cutting and calling loud and often and such and hunters went into the woods and tried to duplicate what they saw in the advent of the video hunting world. So, we went from the days when man had maybe an old box call or a an old home made slate from a coffee can or roof tile where he was lucky just to make a sound or two, - to the evolution of everyone having a vest full of calls and thinking they are Ben Lee or Preston Pittman. The second thing that I think heavily contributed to the hens being much more muted is the explosion of predators. The numbers are just so much higher than they were twenty years ago where I live. I honestly believe that hens have learned to be more tight lipped to save their back side. Now, I am sure there are other factors, but I think these two issues have had a significant hand in the lesser vocalizations from hens today in the woods. But that being so - what is true in my part of the country may not be true elsewhere. My point and to connect it to this subject being discussed - I have watched the hens and learned to evolve and also talk less where I live and hunt and my has success went way up as a result. A little goes a long ways. When that bird is coming, I just let him come. I can always say more, but I cannot take it back if I start off with too much.