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Started by Flounder, January 26, 2016, 10:28:40 PM
Quote from: Flounder on January 26, 2016, 10:28:40 PMHow do you make him gobble 5 minutes early?
Quote from: turkeyfoot on January 28, 2016, 10:35:17 AMI try if they won't set my clock back 5 Min. and try again. But really easterns are funny can usually get one going early but never seen the need unless I suspect I'm far away and have to book it to close distance. Rios and Mrriams will gobble real early pitch black dark
Quote from: Happy on January 27, 2016, 01:01:26 PMI tend to let them start on their own. I usually am pretty close to them and fine tune my setup from there. Around here the birds will roost in the same general area but I usually can't peg them to an exact tree so I plan on being flexible in the morning.
Quote from: Killerstump on February 24, 2016, 02:07:27 PMI have a Harrison hoot stick but I've never had a bird gobble to itSent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: silvestris on February 27, 2016, 07:26:13 PMQuote from: Killerstump on February 24, 2016, 02:07:27 PMI have a Harrison hoot stick but I've never had a bird gobble to itSent from my iPhone using TapatalkKillerstump, I used my natural voice with great success until I had my stroke in 2012 and lost the ability to owl. I was forced to get an owl caller and I chose the Harrison. I am quite happy with it with the exception of having to carry something else with me and having to dig it out of my pocket. I don't know how experienced you are at owling, so I will risk thinking not too experienced. Forgive me, if otherwise.Unless the turkeys in the areas you hunt have been owled to death, they will respond to a well-delivered owl. You really only need two calls, the traditional "who cooks for you all" and the two note "oooooh-ahh". I prefer the two note as a distant gobbler may gobble in the middle of the longer eight note sequence and you could miss it.Go to You Tube and listen to Harrison and some of the other expert owlers. Many are very good. Ignore the fancy stuff and concentrate on the two calls I mentioned. Hand placement is very important. You want to choke the call down and just open your hand a little bit when more volume is desired. You need to practice so that when you use the caller, you can do so with little thought. Don't overdo it when hunting as you only need to know two things, where you are and where he is. Once he gobbles, put the caller away and gain position to call the gobbler.I hunted an area once where there was a hunter across the river each of the four mornings that I hunted the area who I named "Ole Four Hoot". He never raised a gobble with his owling. It was a pretty steep decline into the river bottom and on the last morning I decided that I was not going to make the effort if "Ole Four Hoot" was down there. He was, so I decided to give him a thrill by gobbling at his owl. When I did, a nice gobbler answered my gobble somewhat to the east on my side of the river so I went to him. He never gobbled on his own, nor did he respect my calling. He did, however answer a real owl once. The object of this discourse is to learn to owl realistically and don't overdo it.
Quote from: Killerstump on February 27, 2016, 07:28:58 PMUnless the turkeys in the areas you hunt have been owled to death, they will respond to a well-delivered owl. You really only need two calls, the traditional "who cooks for you all" and the two note "oooooh-ahh". I prefer the two note as a distant gobbler may gobble in the middle of the longer eight note sequence and you could miss it.
Quote from: mlisandro on February 24, 2016, 12:49:25 PMOwl hoot is the way to go!