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Started by StruttinGobbler3, February 17, 2018, 10:13:17 PM
Quote from: StruttinGobbler3 on February 17, 2018, 10:21:30 PMhttps://youtu.be/rzyM4uJpzzYOk here's the link. If you copy and paste into your browser it will take you to the video. I'm not sure how else to do it. Thanks and let me know what you think.
Quote from: GobbleNut on February 18, 2018, 10:13:12 AMThis is a generic assessment of the call and calling,...that is, if I heard the sound file without any knowledge of who the caller was, this is what I would say. (in other words, this is not meant to be critical of either you or the call, just an unbiased opinion).First off, the good: the call can obviously make turkey sounds and the caller knows the "basics" in terms of call function, rhythm, and mechanics. Assuming the caller knows when to apply the various sounds in a turkey hunting setting, the call and caller could no doubt call gobblers.The improvements: practice and experimentation will make perfect, but the ability to understand the "nuances" of turkey calling often takes nothing more than a lot of time in the woods calling turkeys and seeing how they respond to varying calling techniques. Having spent over five decades doing that, and while watching many different hunters call to turkeys, here is the one consistently key element of importance (all else being equal): THE BACK-END OF THE YELP.Turkeys key-in on the lower, back-end of a yelp more than any other single element in calling. In my opinion, a hunter that puts the right tone, rasp, emphasis, and inflection on the back end of their yelping will consistently call turkeys, and more of them.So, coming back to the call and the sound file, IMO, that call will make the sound you need to make. You just need to focus in on the yelps and get the right inflection where it is needed. My from watching the results in the field where it matters.