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Started by Jwall, January 18, 2016, 09:49:14 PM
Quote from: MK M GOBL on January 18, 2016, 11:06:59 PMIn the last 20+ years of selling, seminars and instruction I would say a mouth call is the hardest to learn an master for most. Other people take to it like a duck on water, I was able to "call" with it after an hour... this means make some sounds. Took me a good year to really get it down to where I didn't have to think about what I needed to do to call with it. Cool deal with it is no motion when birds are close, don't have to have a call in hand with bow or gun and I can run a slate call at the same time and sound like multiple birds. Perseverance is the biggest key, I do trim my calls to fit my mouth ( have you tried using a plain 2 reed to start?), best thing you might do is have someone who is proficient with the sit with you in person and help you a long and don't try to learn everything at once, learn one call then move on. Once mastered there isn't much you can't do. Coyote calling, Elk calling and pretty much everything a turkey says, yup I can Gobble on it too!MK M GOBL
Quote from: MK M GOBL on January 19, 2016, 09:33:38 PMAnother thing with all the say this word say that word, all they are trying to do is teach you jaw motion which relates to tongue pressure against the reeds. Also how you shape your mouth and how you release air from your diaphragm. Even if you only learn soft clucks, purrs and yelps you can close the deal on them longbeards. With out trying to make a "turkey" sound are you able to hit a range of tones from high to lows?MK M GOBL