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Started by Cutt, March 21, 2012, 04:23:12 PM
Quote from: MrB0000M on March 21, 2012, 07:37:06 PMi personally think that there is less gobbling it might sound crazy but i think its because there is more hens just seems like the gobblers have lots of hens no need to run around gobbling that and our season is a tad to late
Quote from: Frankinthelaurels on March 22, 2012, 02:17:29 PMFirst off, gobbling is triggered by the length of daylight...it's called phototropisms. Turkeys gobble in PA all the time but that doesn't mean they are breeding. I have at least a dozen longbeards who roost on the hill behind my house and their ancestors have done so also for the last 35 years..they gobble from around groundhogs day in early February until well into June..weather does have some affect and effects the amount and rates of gobbling .. days like today they are going nuts, on days in March when the weather sucks with 2 feet of snow and howling winds you don't hear a sound. THE HENS will determine when breeding occurs and they only need to breed once and can keep sperm alive for 56 days in their ovidepositor and don't need to breed any more..so they can breed in March but don't implant the sperm until lare April or early May...in the southern laurels they almost always are on the nest around May 6-9.. SO don't let the heat, warmth, sunshine scare you... everything is just as it always was and will be.. The season will be just fine, same thing in OHIO if the latitudes are the same.