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Started by okiegobblers, March 23, 2012, 04:26:07 PM
Quote from: jblackburn on March 23, 2012, 04:58:41 PMI would rather not turkey call while scouting, but since you backed out of the area and did not spook him, you will probably be ok.What kind of locater were you using? Sometimes a variety of locators is useful to have as well.
Quote from: okiegobblers on March 23, 2012, 06:32:00 PMWhat is the concern with doing this? Call shy, bump them, etc?
Quote from: jblackburn on March 23, 2012, 08:28:00 PMQuote from: okiegobblers on March 23, 2012, 06:32:00 PMWhat is the concern with doing this? Call shy, bump them, etc?I would be most concerned with calling one up and spooking it. You run the risk of condition him to not come to the call.
Quote from: okiegobblers on March 23, 2012, 11:06:36 PMQuote from: jblackburn on March 23, 2012, 08:28:00 PMQuote from: okiegobblers on March 23, 2012, 06:32:00 PMWhat is the concern with doing this? Call shy, bump them, etc?I would be most concerned with calling one up and spooking it. You run the risk of condition him to not come to the call.Yeah I agree with you guys. By the way I was using my Gooserbat Hillbilly. Can't wait to call him in with it on opening day!
Quote from: mightyjoeyoung on March 24, 2012, 01:11:52 PMOur season isn't for over a month. I see absolutley zero problems with a little calling early in the year to get a bead on where the groups of birds are. I was out with a friend scouting yesterday morning, right at daylight. Nothing to a crow (as usual around these parts), nothing to an owl call. A couple clucks, purrs and a flydown cacle and BOOM 5 different answers from 5 different birds still on the roost at &:00 am. As soon as the hens started talking and belive me they were talkin, we moved out to another area and did the same routine to have 5 more answer a short series of fast yelps and clucks. I made ZERO calls after that and we just sat still as I had the camera with me and wanted to get a few pics if the opportunity arose. About 5 nimutes into our sit, the furthest west bird that answered could be seen comming at a half trot/half strut through the timber, cutting along the bottom edge of the bench we were on, looking for the "hen". He got withing 65 yards of us from over 350 yards out with ONE short call series! Exactly why I DID NOT make another call after I got those answers. He messed around for a couple of minutes poking his head up and then going back into half-strutt occasionally until the other dominant bird chimed in from off to our east about 150 yards out along the same bench we were on. As soon as the first bird heard that second gobbler he lost all interest in looking for that "hen" and made a bee line for the other gobbler, half strutting the whole way. I think some guys on here and other sites give these birds just a little bit too much credit in the "intelligence department" than they should. They have a brain the size of a PEANUT! They are a wary bird yes, but you are simply not going to "condition" a bird or spook a bird permanently by calling to them this early in the season! They aren't a deer, that will give that stand a look every time they go past it because the doofus that was in it 2 weeks ago stunk of cigarrette smoke and coffee and couldn't sit still to save his life. They will come to within TOUCHING distance of you in a blind that was popped up that morning, where litterally ANY other animal will freak out over it. They ARE NOT SMART...at least not the way people think they are. They have a genetically ingrained wariness and incredible eyesight atuned to movement that keeps them alive in a harsh and deadly world. Nothing more. Sometimes I do wonder though if maybe they are smarter than some of the folks that chase after them in the spring. Ever wonder where the term "Bird Brain" comes from???