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Started by bradbathome, March 09, 2015, 02:53:19 PM
Quote from: Treerooster on March 09, 2015, 11:31:33 PM. But hey...if it blows your skirt up...go for it.
Quote from: turkey buster on March 09, 2015, 11:52:00 PMHave you killed your Arizona/New Mexico Goulds turkey yet? Lol
Quote from: bradbathome on March 09, 2015, 02:53:19 PMI am planning a trip to FL to try for an Osceola and I have been looking at the map from the NWTF on the line for easterns/Osceola or what they consider the line. I will be hunting about 75 miles below the line which I would think is Osceola country but I'm sure some easterns also. I am trying for a grand slam. My question is if you shoot an eastern in the counties below the line does the NWTF consider it an Osceola in your grand slam??? Thanks
Quote from: Hooksfan on March 09, 2015, 03:54:18 PMWell here we go............I have some ideas that may raise a few eyebrows, but I would say you would be very safe calling it an Osceola for the purpose of a Grand Slam if it was below that line. I have had some interest in this topic for a while and have spoken with more than one biologist about it. I even had one tell me that there was no DNA difference between an Osceola and an Eastern. I know there are certain characteristics that are attributed to the Osceola---Lower weight, more black barring on the wings, darker color, less vocal, etc. Those characteristics alone would describe to a T the birds I grew up hunting in Southeastern, Louisiana. It is my belief that those birds which inhabit the swampy regions along the gulf coast could technically meet the qualifications to be called Osceola. Now, I am sure Florida and the money brought in from the monopoly they have on the term Osceola would offer some resistance to that theory. I can say that I have hunted Easterns in a good many states and more years than I would like to think have passed. I would also say that even the birds(Easterns) I have hunted and killed in North Louisiana is a totally different bird from the ones I grew up with in Southeastern Louisiana. I do believe it is probably more likely that the truest strains of Osceola would be confined to the South of that line, but it would take a lot of convincing for me to not believe that if you drew a line from the northern tip of Florida all the way west to the Mississippi River, that those birds would at least be a hybrid of what is called an Osceola and Eastern. Just my two cents.