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Started by quavers59, July 19, 2017, 01:31:48 PM
Quote from: MK M GOBL on September 26, 2017, 09:55:01 PMThe hunter who doesn't tell you how good they are usually is.Just like their hunting spots. "Haven't heard a gobble all morning"and "I don't kill any birds"... LOLMK M GOBL
Quote from: eggshell on September 12, 2017, 04:46:21 PMI will name one name of a real man's turkey hunter that impressed me as a person and turkey hunter...Harold Knight. Now I only met him once and watched him hunt that one time, but I think i was right to be impressed. Someone can correct me if I am wrong.
Quote from: eggshell on October 06, 2017, 11:11:47 AMmtns2hunt, I apologize for posting to the thread and bringing it back to attention. I by no means meant a person had to hunt 20 years to reach a certain level of expertise. It is a matter of time in the field. all I was agreeing with is if a person has 20 years under their belt it is fair to assume they have mastered the skill set at an advanced level, they probably done it sooner. Across the board considering all turkey hunters, I would guess there are far more who spend 10 or less days afield than there are 30 days out. When you average across all hunters it moves the average time to develop skills up. I ran a turkey check station for 30 years as a supervisor for DNR and saw and talked to thousands of turkey hunters. I can tell you over that time I would guess only about 25% of the hunters I saw had advanced hunting skills, across all ages and time hunting. So there is truly no magic number but there are averages you can make general assumptions from. I used to train bird dogs and we always considered it took 1,000 contacts with birds to make a truly good dog. Some learned faster and some slower, but if you put 1,000 contacts on a dog he was pretty much finished. Maybe there's a number like that for turkey hunters. Again, I had no intention of offending anyone.