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Started by aclawrence, March 29, 2024, 09:07:54 AM
Quote from: Badger on March 29, 2024, 09:16:10 AMSir, I had a couple of spots like this that I hunted 30 to 40 years ago, but now that I am getting older and friends and family farms are gone my favorite spots are gone. I had access to Public ground but those spots are gone today. I was scouting 2 days ago in an area of a game lands that I had had never scouted before. Old habits and memories are all one has when they get older.
Quote from: aclawrence on March 29, 2024, 09:07:54 AMOne thing that makes me sad while turkey hunting is visiting an area that used to hold several gobblers. You could get up on a high spot and hear birds in all different directions. I'm thinking of a certain spot that was like this when I first really started hunting public land. I had one really special hunt in there where I was up high on the side of ridge, fairly thick pines on my left and on the right it dropped down into a huge bottom. I set up on a bird and got to watch him strut and gobble on the limb. I called him in and killed him. That was the last bird I ever heard in there. Did I ruin the spot, should I have let him go? I think he was up so high because he was alone and looking for hens. I know it's not my fault. I did hear Chubbs and Andy talking about this on their last podcast how birds can vacate an area when there's not enough food and they don't come back. Maybe that's what happened. I have several spots like this and I still go to them and sit down at the tree where I've killed a bird before, but the hills ring silent. I'm sure ya'll all have spots like this. What's really sad is they've come into this one area I'm talking about and cut it all down. There was a really cool "secret" ridge top in old planted pines that I loved to walk through. It was one of my favorite spots just to be in, but it's gone now. Things change and this might even help bring some turkeys back in there now until it grows up into a thick cutover. Good luck this year and don't forget to check back in on those old spots. If you hear a gobble it will be really special.
Quote from: turkey stew on March 29, 2024, 10:00:30 AMOver population and I'm not talking about turkeys! In my area the Amish shoot everything and destroy the forest! I call them human carp.
Quote from: bwhana on March 29, 2024, 11:16:25 AMThis is the case with a favorite piece of game lands here. Used to hear 10+ gobblers on any given day in season, but you are lucky to hear a couple now.The only habitat changes there is they switched out white clover in the few plots to crimson, which turkeys and deer ignore. They also have not done a controlled burn on the field areas in 6 years, which they used to do every 2 or 3. But the biggest factor I have noticed is we had a period of 5 straight years without acorns due to late frosts. When the acorns were abundant prior to this spell, the birds were thick and it looked like someone took tillers into the woods there was so much scratching. Almost no scratching to be found now.
Quote from: Dtrkyman on March 29, 2024, 12:57:47 PMMidwest farm country turkeys consistently use the same places for years, western mountain turkeys not so much!Habitat in constantly changing, birds follow the select cuts and burns!