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Started by NYlogbeards, February 25, 2017, 01:36:01 AM
Quote from: culpeper on May 22, 2017, 09:33:54 AMTaunto Hawk, Green Co is s strong area for birds, has been for many years. Congrats on your hunt, nice pics!I can say from compiling 12.3 miles over the weekend that we heard not one gobble . We saw birds strutting later in the evening, and some during the day with red heads, no white heads and no one excited about breeding. A tough 2 days of casting calls and covering A LOT of ground with not much to show, except a lot of exercise. One more weekend....hope their attitude changes this week.
Quote from: TauntoHawk on May 23, 2017, 09:16:01 AMGot a little more quiet rest of the weekend. Saturday I got a youth hunter on his first turkey at 9am when 7 birds came running in but completely silent, couldn't raise a gobble rest of the day. This was after light limb gobbling and 2 gobbles on the ground immediately after flydown we just got in a good spot and posted up not my thing but the kid made run and gun not the best option. Sunday I had a longbeard (if you can call him that) and 5 hens roosted infront of me, he never gobbled once on the limb and didn't strut at all once on the ground just started pecking with the hens. Got glass on him and he was small bodied with maybe 7.5in piddly beard n little spurs so I left him to wander off as he didn't excite me enough to wrap my last tag on him. Encountered another bird that was the exact same later in the day on another farm just a small 2yr old pecking around with hens and jakes not gobbling at all, got in front but again figured he'd be more entertaining next year and wouldn't wear my last tag. Spent the rest of Sunday afternoon and evening Scouting and glassing looking for a good one. Found several flocks but eventually found what I was looking for, a haus of a Tom strutting for hens gobbling and chasing 2 smaller toms and a handful of jakes off single handily. Kept tabs on him the next hour until he left the field to roost. Got in early the next morning and tip toes right into where I thought he'd roost. Sat down at 4:30 in the dark and could hear him drumming already. A coyote got him and his pals gobbling early and they got very worked up over the next 40min he was 36yds from me in a Big Maple facing right at me. I had the perfect place to land right out off my gun barrel and thought for sure this was it. Right before fly down a steady rain began to fall and the birds shut off as quick as they had turned on. A few of the jakes and other toms pitched further down the ridge and of course the dominant bird turned around and pitched back to them landing just out of range. The got heavier and the hens opted to stay in the tree. The Toms and jakes did something I've seen them do in fields in heavy rain before they literally huddled up like sheep and just stood almost motionless for 20min while the rain fell. As soon as the shower tapered off then hens pitched to the top of the ridge and the Toms/Jakes made a bee line for them passing just a few yards outside my comfort zone. The property only ran to the top of the ridge so I was out of room to play with on those birds. Didn't find anything of interest the rest of the morning and when more rain moved in I called it a day and NY season. Back to work now, camping this weekend so my season is a wrap.
Quote from: mikejd on May 23, 2017, 09:44:00 AMQuote from: TauntoHawk on May 23, 2017, 09:16:01 AMGot a little more quiet rest of the weekend. Saturday I got a youth hunter on his first turkey at 9am when 7 birds came running in but completely silent, couldn't raise a gobble rest of the day. This was after light limb gobbling and 2 gobbles on the ground immediately after flydown we just got in a good spot and posted up not my thing but the kid made run and gun not the best option. Sunday I had a longbeard (if you can call him that) and 5 hens roosted infront of me, he never gobbled once on the limb and didn't strut at all once on the ground just started pecking with the hens. Got glass on him and he was small bodied with maybe 7.5in piddly beard n little spurs so I left him to wander off as he didn't excite me enough to wrap my last tag on him. Encountered another bird that was the exact same later in the day on another farm just a small 2yr old pecking around with hens and jakes not gobbling at all, got in front but again figured he'd be more entertaining next year and wouldn't wear my last tag. Spent the rest of Sunday afternoon and evening Scouting and glassing looking for a good one. Found several flocks but eventually found what I was looking for, a haus of a Tom strutting for hens gobbling and chasing 2 smaller toms and a handful of jakes off single handily. Kept tabs on him the next hour until he left the field to roost. Got in early the next morning and tip toes right into where I thought he'd roost. Sat down at 4:30 in the dark and could hear him drumming already. A coyote got him and his pals gobbling early and they got very worked up over the next 40min he was 36yds from me in a Big Maple facing right at me. I had the perfect place to land right out off my gun barrel and thought for sure this was it. Right before fly down a steady rain began to fall and the birds shut off as quick as they had turned on. A few of the jakes and other toms pitched further down the ridge and of course the dominant bird turned around and pitched back to them landing just out of range. The got heavier and the hens opted to stay in the tree. The Toms and jakes did something I've seen them do in fields in heavy rain before they literally huddled up like sheep and just stood almost motionless for 20min while the rain fell. As soon as the shower tapered off then hens pitched to the top of the ridge and the Toms/Jakes made a bee line for them passing just a few yards outside my comfort zone. The property only ran to the top of the ridge so I was out of room to play with on those birds. Didn't find anything of interest the rest of the morning and when more rain moved in I called it a day and NY season. Back to work now, camping this weekend so my season is a wrap.Sounds like a good season to me.
Quote from: TauntoHawk on May 19, 2017, 02:30:48 PMQuote from: culpeper on May 19, 2017, 01:52:23 PMTauntoHawk, sounds like you have a good area...what part of the State are you hunting? Good luck this weekendI'm in Greene County, south of Albany. Properties are scattered from in the Catskills to right against the Hudson. From what I can tell without having hunted many other counties we must have one of the better habitats and populations in the state.
Quote from: culpeper on May 19, 2017, 01:52:23 PMTauntoHawk, sounds like you have a good area...what part of the State are you hunting? Good luck this weekend
Quote from: EZ on May 23, 2017, 12:11:04 PMQuote from: TauntoHawk on May 19, 2017, 02:30:48 PMQuote from: culpeper on May 19, 2017, 01:52:23 PMTauntoHawk, sounds like you have a good area...what part of the State are you hunting? Good luck this weekendI'm in Greene County, south of Albany. Properties are scattered from in the Catskills to right against the Hudson. From what I can tell without having hunted many other counties we must have one of the better habitats and populations in the state.Whose box ya running there?
Quote from: culpeper on May 24, 2017, 08:22:14 AMTerry builds a good box call!