Quote from: 0369GYSGT on April 09, 2012, 09:27:43 AM
Great tip Redleg06,
I never thought about using a call in the evening after they roosted.
How long after dark will they shut up and not respond to a call?
If you can remember any more tips, please feel free to share them.
Some will keep gobbling later than others but usually I'm done roosting them 5-10 min after dark. Most of the time, if i've gone in closer to get a better look at which tree they are actually in, Ill let it get completely dark before sneaking back out and they are usually done gobbling by that time.
I've never stayed in there past 20-30 min after its gotten dark to try and listen for turkey so I couldnt tell you.
Also, i do try to give them every opportunity to sound off on their own but, as often as not, some kind of loud excited turkey calling is the best/only way to get them to sound off.
Usually some excited yelping (as in more excited than you would really use to call in a turkey most of the time) is a good way to get them to sound off. I may differ from most guys on this but some people will start off low volume one series then build up in each series after but I think to get a true shock gobble like this, you start off sudden and loud right off the bat. Otherwise, you arent really "shocking" them and it can lose some of it's effectiveness. The suddenness is, IMO what makes the difference in getting them to sound off.
One other thing I will add is that you are basically trying to get them to shock gobble here so if you start doing this routine too early before fly up then you, A) run the risk of bumping one that comes in silent on you and B) lose the effectiveness of the "shock effect" it has on them because they have heard you do it for the last hour and arent as caught off guard by it. I've always felt like the best shock gobbles are usually going to happen the very first series of calls or right after a sudden loud noise. Even Coyotes suddenly cranking up will get a gobble on occasion if the birds are on the limb.
I know some folks have issues using turkey calls to locate birds but, in my experience, i've had a lot of success doing this when nothing else will work.