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Started by splinter84, December 28, 2015, 05:25:53 PM
Quote from: WillowRidgeCalls on December 29, 2015, 12:03:19 AMSplinter, your far a head of most of the today turkey hunters. Birds communicate a lot more than what hunters believe they do, BUT they've tried their way of calling with no response. The term "over calling" is so miss used and misunderstood by todays hunters. Birds are very vocal, the more birds in a group the they talk, your lone birds are your quiet ones, they do a lot less talking. They don't want to make themselves apparent or stand out, because of predators, so they keep their talking to a low tone (old hen) or very short bursts of mid tone (young hen) calls. A low tone call is a call that most hunters couldn't hear at 25-30yds, so hunters think they aren't talking today or you shouldn't be calling, UNTRUE, learn how to run your calls in a low tone and talk a bird right up until you pull the trigger on them. Hunters will tell you, you shouldn't call to a bird that's committed and coming towards you, or stop calling to a bird that's within 75yds of you or you'll spook him. If that bird can see through the area your hunting, if you keep calling to him in the same talk, tone, and cadence as you were when you stuck him up, yeah he'll lock up or run off, if it's thick woods or cover where he can't see very far you can get away with being a bit to loud or to fast in your cadences, but never run the same volume or cadence over an over or the same call talk. You'll hear young/new hunters and quite a few champion calls, OVER CALL. It's the nature of a human being, lol. Young hunters haven't learned yet and they are so determined to kill a bird they just keep calling over and over, the same tone, same cadence, same bird talk, yelp.....yelp....yelp....yelp ect. ect. Champion callers fall into the same problem, they know how to call and what calls to send out, BUT they run a series of 3-4 yelps and it just didn't sound right to them, so they run another 3-4 yelps, that sounded better, but I can run a better yelp than that, so they run another series of yelps, there that sounded like it should! The problem now is their 3-4 yelp series just became a 9-12 yelp series to a bird that already knows where you are, he doesn't need a lost call series of yelps, OVER CALLING! I can't count the number of times I've seen that done. Your calling changes from one day to the next, what worked yesterday may not work today. It's important to learn what your birds are doing and what part of their breeding cycle they are in, you have to change your calling accordingly, meaning taking the temp of the bird. Learning to do that takes a few years and or studding charts and birds in your areas.That being said, my definition of "over calling" is using the same call (yelp-cluck-cuts) over an over without changing the tone, speed, cadence, in which your running it, not the amount of calling your doing.
Quote from: paboxcall on December 29, 2015, 12:54:19 AMQuote from: WillowRidgeCalls on December 29, 2015, 12:03:19 AMSplinter, your far a head of most of the today turkey hunters. Birds communicate a lot more than what hunters believe they do, BUT they've tried their way of calling with no response. The term "over calling" is so miss used and misunderstood by todays hunters. Birds are very vocal, the more birds in a group the they talk, your lone birds are your quiet ones, they do a lot less talking. They don't want to make themselves apparent or stand out, because of predators, so they keep their talking to a low tone (old hen) or very short bursts of mid tone (young hen) calls. A low tone call is a call that most hunters couldn't hear at 25-30yds, so hunters think they aren't talking today or you shouldn't be calling, UNTRUE, learn how to run your calls in a low tone and talk a bird right up until you pull the trigger on them. Hunters will tell you, you shouldn't call to a bird that's committed and coming towards you, or stop calling to a bird that's within 75yds of you or you'll spook him. If that bird can see through the area your hunting, if you keep calling to him in the same talk, tone, and cadence as you were when you stuck him up, yeah he'll lock up or run off, if it's thick woods or cover where he can't see very far you can get away with being a bit to loud or to fast in your cadences, but never run the same volume or cadence over an over or the same call talk. You'll hear young/new hunters and quite a few champion calls, OVER CALL. It's the nature of a human being, lol. Young hunters haven't learned yet and they are so determined to kill a bird they just keep calling over and over, the same tone, same cadence, same bird talk, yelp.....yelp....yelp....yelp ect. ect. Champion callers fall into the same problem, they know how to call and what calls to send out, BUT they run a series of 3-4 yelps and it just didn't sound right to them, so they run another 3-4 yelps, that sounded better, but I can run a better yelp than that, so they run another series of yelps, there that sounded like it should! The problem now is their 3-4 yelp series just became a 9-12 yelp series to a bird that already knows where you are, he doesn't need a lost call series of yelps, OVER CALLING! I can't count the number of times I've seen that done. Your calling changes from one day to the next, what worked yesterday may not work today. It's important to learn what your birds are doing and what part of their breeding cycle they are in, you have to change your calling accordingly, meaning taking the temp of the bird. Learning to do that takes a few years and or studding charts and birds in your areas.That being said, my definition of "over calling" is using the same call (yelp-cluck-cuts) over an over without changing the tone, speed, cadence, in which your running it, not the amount of calling your doing.
Quote from: Yoder409 on December 28, 2015, 05:58:16 PMI guess my definition of over-calling would be calling to the point that it turns off a turkey that had previously been interested and responding.That being said............ I pride myself in over-calling.I am fully aware of how I need to call if I positively HAVE GOT to kill a bird. But at this point in my turkey hunting career, I don't have to kill one that bad anymore. I would rather call too much and call too loud to fire a bird up. It doesn't turn my crank too much to kill one that comes in silent. I want him strutting and gobbling his ying yang off the whole way in.
Quote from: Tail Feathers on January 04, 2016, 08:57:17 PMQuote from: Yoder409 on December 28, 2015, 05:58:16 PMI guess my definition of over-calling would be calling to the point that it turns off a turkey that had previously been interested and responding.That being said............ I pride myself in over-calling.I am fully aware of how I need to call if I positively HAVE GOT to kill a bird. But at this point in my turkey hunting career, I don't have to kill one that bad anymore. I would rather call too much and call too loud to fire a bird up. It doesn't turn my crank too much to kill one that comes in silent. I want him strutting and gobbling his ying yang off the whole way in.Sir, we should hunt together some day! I love to call and hear the gobble. I do take their "temperature" but I really like the ones that like to hear me call.