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Calling VS Experience/Woodsmanship

Started by GobbleNut, January 19, 2026, 09:13:27 AM

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GobbleNut

Another pre-season topic for discussion (mostly for the newer hunters among us):

We tend to discuss turkey calls and calling a great deal. My impression is that some folks might begin to think that calling ability is THE key to turkey hunting success. Now, I tend to agree that the more realistic somebody's calling is, the better. I have concluded over the decades, however, that calling ability is secondary to what we generally classify as "woodsmanship".

To me, that term can best be summed up as knowing what to "say" to a turkey, when to say it, why you are saying it, and where to say it from. Unfortunately for most of us, learning how to pull that off on a somewhat regular basis often requires a learning curve that is only accomplished with significant time spent in the turkey woods...and generally with quite a few failures front-loaded onto that learning curve.

Quite honestly, learning to make all of the sounds a turkey makes with adequate realism with the tools available today is the easy part. That other element of experience and woodsmanship? ...Not so much.  ;D 

eggshell

Your right about one thing Gobblenut....this is mostly for the others on here, not the G.O.A.T.S  :TooFunny:

In all seriousness, calling is like putting mustard on a hotdog. It's always a hotdog and sandwich and you can eat it plain, but mustard makes it a whole lot better. Good calling is putting some mustard on something that is already done. Woodsmanship is what kills the most turkeys and that entails a whole lot of things. From reading a birds mood, to positioning, to how and where you move, knowing turkey language and what to say when. The number one problem with may inexperienced hunters/callers is too much mustard. Too much Mustard ruins even a hotdog.

Yoder409

I get into this one with an old buddy (accomplished turkey killer) at least once a year.

It becomes obvious, eventually, that it's easier to call a bird to a place he WANTS to come to.  THAT.... being in that spot.... is your woodsmanship.

So, that being a given..... out of two guys that have equal woodsmanship skills.... my premise is that the guy who calls with more realism will kill more birds.

He disagrees.   He's allowed.
PA elitist since 1979

The good Lord ain't made a gobbler I can't kill.  I just gotta be there at the right time.....  on the day he wants to die.

CALLM2U

It doesn't really matter what quary you're hunting, if you have good woodsmanship, your sucess chances go way up.  Squirrels, deer, turkey ect. 

Where I grew up, there was a old man who was well known for his sucess in turkey hunting.  He rarely called.  He just understood turkeys and how they moved.  So he was often where they wanted to be and never made a call. 

While it's impossible to deny his sucess, I do enjoy the communication aspect of turkey hunting.  I want to have a conversation with one and fool him. 

GobbleNut

Quote from: CALLM2U on Today at 09:14:48 AMI do enjoy the communication aspect of turkey hunting.  I want to have a conversation with one and fool him. 

I would take this one step further. I want to have that conversation and KNOW that the reason I killed him was BECAUSE he came to my calling.

Now, I have killed gobblers where I knew I would have killed them if I had never made a peep but that is not what I play the game for. The "reward", if you will, in turkey hunting for me is having that conversation and knowing that he came looking for me because he thought I was a real turkey (of the feathered variety, that is).  ;D

WLT III

Sit down to em wrong, and 9 out of 10 times, your toast, no matter how REAL your calling is.