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Started by quavers59, June 04, 2017, 12:46:03 PM
Quote from: silvestris on June 12, 2017, 10:18:23 AMTurkeys will come a long distance to a well made call. One would not know that unless one tried. The benefit to that style of hunting is that your presence is not broadcast all over the whole forest. As a dearly departed friend once imparted, "It is a sin to allow them to know that you exist".
Quote from: Farmboy27 on June 17, 2017, 10:47:55 PMQuote from: silvestris on June 12, 2017, 10:18:23 AMTurkeys will come a long distance to a well made call. One would not know that unless one tried. The benefit to that style of hunting is that your presence is not broadcast all over the whole forest. As a dearly departed friend once imparted, "It is a sin to allow them to know that you exist".Yup. Sometimes they will. Other times they won't. I'm not one to wait forever to find out. And I'm sure as heck not setting up farther away than I have to. The closer I get the less chance there is that a real hen or another hunter will get between the gobbler and me. And with all due respect to your friend, if he doesn't know that you exist, then all you're doing is ambushing him!
Quote from: g8rvet on June 12, 2017, 07:11:10 PMI have a nephew that was so scared of bumping them, he would not set up close enough. I told him if you never bump a turkey, ever, you are not being aggressive enough. He took that to heart and has bumped a few, but his success ratio has gone WAY up. He says he did not kill one this year, but he set up and called in two, one for his dad (noob) and one for a friend (noob) and I told him he killed those birds, he just did not pull the trigger. Bumping will happen no matter your intentions. Especially on public ground. I too tend to plan to go back and be a little less aggressive, but on hard hunted public land that has tons of roads, getting away from the crowds is not always easy, so there I tend to be a little more aggressive than I do on private land I hunt, where spooking them is a major no no (small tracts).
Quote from: donjuan on June 10, 2017, 10:14:45 PMWell this has become quite the dick measuring contest.
Quote from: owlhoot on June 18, 2017, 10:00:31 AMQuote from: Farmboy27 on June 17, 2017, 10:47:55 PMQuote from: silvestris on June 12, 2017, 10:18:23 AMTurkeys will come a long distance to a well made call. One would not know that unless one tried. The benefit to that style of hunting is that your presence is not broadcast all over the whole forest. As a dearly departed friend once imparted, "It is a sin to allow them to know that you exist".Yup. Sometimes they will. Other times they won't. I'm not one to wait forever to find out. And I'm sure as heck not setting up farther away than I have to. The closer I get the less chance there is that a real hen or another hunter will get between the gobbler and me. And with all due respect to your friend, if he doesn't know that you exist, then all you're doing is ambushing him! I think not knowing you exist is from not being seen as a hunter and letting your calling get the bird without spooking it . I would guess that with a lot of the hunters running around and trying to beat the other ones to the gobbling bird is a way to not let the other guys get him.So how the heck can you expect the others not to do the same . Sounds like a good way to get between another hunter and the gobbling cutting him off who may have been set up and working that bird before you ever made your mad dash into the woods. This getting ahead off the gobblers direction or getting as close and sneaking up is more of an ambush than calling from a bit further away ever will be!
Quote from: Happy on June 19, 2017, 12:28:43 PMI have found that playing recordings of a wildcat screaming near parking lots as hunters are getting out of their trucks tends to help thin out the competition. Sent from my SM-G800R4 using Tapatalk
Quote from: VaTuRkStOmPeR on June 20, 2017, 09:55:49 PMThis conversation has endured much longer than I ever expected.People clearly have different hunting styles and those styles often reflect a variety of factors to include the hunter's physical condition, their preferred method of killing a gobbler and one of the unmentioned contingencies for me is the type of property I'm hunting.On my personal leases and private pieces, I hunt with an approach I can only describe as cautious aggression. I'll get as tight as possible to a gobbler but I also hunt with a "tomorrow mentality." The best way I can describe that is an aggressive approach that intends to kill the bird today while learning as much about him as possible (and not bumping him) to increase the odds of success for tomorrow. I do not want birds having any awareness of my presence in the woods and will go to great lengths to keep my birds oblivious to hunting pressure. My brother hunts with the same approach and it preserves quality hunting for the duration of the season. The best way to measure the effectiveness of this methodology, and it's purely anecdotal at best, is to visit your property during the last week of the season, see how many birds are gobbling and how willing they are to work. If you're still calling birds in during the 5th or 6th week of the season, you've done a great job minimizing pressure and intrusion.When I hunt public ground out of state, I'm hunting for today. Birds I would normally be roosting for the next day here in VA for tomorrow's hunt are birds I will hunt right to fly-up on out of state public ground (where all day hunting is legal). You can't hunt a bumped turkey, so I'm cautious not to do so but I'm not as worried about tomorrow or next week. I need a kill from that state and I'm going to cover ground more aggressively with little regard for the birds I'm going to bump that aren't gobbling. I'm trying to find the one bird that will cooperate not minimize my presence for turkeys I won't be hunting later on. If that involves having to bump a turkey that's gobbling very little to get to one that's on fire, I'm more than willing to sacrifice educating an uncooperative bird for one that wants to die.