registration is free , easy and welcomed !!!
Started by Happy, June 01, 2025, 07:37:46 AM
Quote from: Greg Massey on June 01, 2025, 10:09:34 AMSo my question is why did I see more gobblers running together and hens out in the field and the gobblers didn't even pay any attention to each other? Also the hens really didn't pay any attention to the gobblers in like years past. I have seen Jakes do more interaction with gobblers as the gobblers were following them around this past season. I had a group of 3 - two year old gobblers still running together this past spring. No hens in the picture at all ... I really don't have any answers. HappyBut I will say I did see more gobblers / Jakes this year .. No problem with the numbers in my area, just not much breeding activity at all... JUST WEIRD ... I had a member on the forum tell me before his opening morning season, he was hearing 10 different gobblers in his hunting area, after opening day and he did managed to kill one, and the next days following he didn't hear a gobbler and he hunted for several more days.
Quote from: Happy on June 01, 2025, 12:09:13 PMQuote from: Greg Massey on June 01, 2025, 10:09:34 AMSo my question is why did I see more gobblers running together and hens out in the field and the gobblers didn't even pay any attention to each other? Also the hens really didn't pay any attention to the gobblers in like years past. I have seen Jakes do more interaction with gobblers as the gobblers were following them around this past season. I had a group of 3 - two year old gobblers still running together this past spring. No hens in the picture at all ... I really don't have any answers. HappyBut I will say I did see more gobblers / Jakes this year .. No problem with the numbers in my area, just not much breeding activity at all... JUST WEIRD ... I had a member on the forum tell me before his opening morning season, he was hearing 10 different gobblers in his hunting area, after opening day and he did managed to kill one, and the next days following he didn't hear a gobbler and he hunted for several more days.Maybe you got a bunch of strong, independent hens that don't need no gobbler Greg. Or maybe they have horrible personalities, and the gobblers would just rather batch it and hang out.I get what you saying. I think this year has been "weird" for a lot of folks. My observations are more about the long breeding season i have been noticing for the last few years.
Quote from: arkrem870 on June 01, 2025, 01:04:07 PMI suspect the same reason we are seeing 5-1 male mallards to female mallards in duck season. Hens are getting killed on the nest at higher rates than hunters are killing drakes/gobblers. Turkey hens aren't hunted but in many places their numbers are still struggling. This topic is serious business
Quote from: deerhunt1988 on June 01, 2025, 01:48:51 PMQuote from: arkrem870 on June 01, 2025, 01:04:07 PMI suspect the same reason we are seeing 5-1 male mallards to female mallards in duck season. Hens are getting killed on the nest at higher rates than hunters are killing drakes/gobblers. Turkey hens aren't hunted but in many places their numbers are still struggling. This topic is serious business Boom. Recent research is finding the alarmingly high predation rates on hens. And recent research is also showing that HEN SURVIVAL is one of the top contributing factors to population growth!As far as "delayed breeding". I'm confident its not from lack of adult gobblers (in MOST areas. In some small localized scenarios it could be). A longer breeding window is more likely caused by weather and nest predation. You'll see this near large river bottoms that are severely impacted by flooding.
Quote from: arkrem870 on June 01, 2025, 02:32:58 PMQuote from: deerhunt1988 on June 01, 2025, 01:48:51 PMQuote from: arkrem870 on June 01, 2025, 01:04:07 PMI suspect the same reason we are seeing 5-1 male mallards to female mallards in duck season. Hens are getting killed on the nest at higher rates than hunters are killing drakes/gobblers. Turkey hens aren't hunted but in many places their numbers are still struggling. This topic is serious business Boom. Recent research is finding the alarmingly high predation rates on hens. And recent research is also showing that HEN SURVIVAL is one of the top contributing factors to population growth!As far as "delayed breeding". I'm confident its not from lack of adult gobblers (in MOST areas. In some small localized scenarios it could be). A longer breeding window is more likely caused by weather and nest predation. You'll see this near large river bottoms that are severely impacted by flooding.Predation is the elephant in the room. Nearly all studies point back to this. In Arkansas you can overlay a poult production chart and a fur price chart.....they follow the same trajectories. Unfortunately trapping is one of the hardest things for dnr to implement. In arkansas we introduced a predator control permit that allows us to take predators year round. Every state should have a similar program. I also advocate for loaner trap programs. Workshops. I am open to discuss bounties / earn a tag options with predator tails/hides. Etc.Dnr's go the route of delayed seasons.etc and more regulations because they can be done with the stroke of a pen and don't require the work of mass predator removal. And it also doesn't have the optics of straight up killing nest predators and throwing them in a ditch. Thats why it's critical to at LEAST own a dozen dog profs and run them on your properties a few times a year within your states guidelines.