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Started by kdsberman, April 02, 2018, 08:52:50 PM
Quote from: kdsberman on April 03, 2018, 07:35:35 AMThanks for the help guys. This is the only farm I have access to hunt around here. I probably should have re-worded the question instead of skipping hunting altogether would you take a year off THIS property?As far as if there's hens they'll be toms, I usually would agree with this. But I remember a couple years ago there was ONE tom in this flock, and no matter how much I watched I never saw another tom around. Well, I shot him. (At the time never thought if I did more harm than good). My dad continued to hunt the same property and always saw hens but never a single tom nor jake.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: mtns2hunt on April 03, 2018, 09:10:00 AMAs stated previously: "what are the regional numbers?" I find that in the early season flocks are still together to some extent and concentrated. Where they concentrate is the question. Is your neighbor feeding them. Turkey hunting has changed and you need to adjust. As you have one band of turkeys and see one to two gobblers I would be sure there are some sub dominate birds around as well as a few groups of jakes. I run cameras all year around and hunt coyotes and any turkey egg eating critter that comes my way. You need to spend time observing to get a really good feel for whats going on.Turkeys travel and I pull many birds off neighboring land by calling. While I have not noticed any decline in turkey numbers some parts of the country are said to be in decline. This makes it even more important to observe and manage your property. Just my 2 cents.
Quote from: Bowguy on April 03, 2018, 09:30:58 AMSounds like all your eggs are in one tiny basket. I believe in conservation so if you feel the need to lay off do so but why on earth not hunt elsewhere?? No excuse would get me to stop. One year I tore my shoulder. It was hanging yet I still duck hunted one armed while I was off work healing. Years ago some medicine burned the skin clean off my crotch. Had to hunt wearing overalls and no underwear but I went. This year I had brain surgery. Had to learn everything over. Balance was off and my dominant eye was sewed shut. Still killed 4 deer, 2 decent bucks. Do what you have to do if it's a lifestyle for ya. You'd kind of have no choice. If it's a passing hobby and you're ok w missing a season you could do that too
Quote from: 3bailey3 on April 02, 2018, 08:58:33 PMMissing a season NO, but I would do everything I could to find a better place to hunt, in state or out!
Quote from: Chris O on April 02, 2018, 09:20:55 PMThere are usually more birds around than what you actually see. And 1 Tom can breed quite a few hens. One thing you could do this fall to help is set some traps for predators. Opossum and Raccoons are hard on nests and coyotes and bobcats are superb turkey killers.
Quote from: dublelung on April 03, 2018, 05:55:23 PMQuote from: Chris O on April 02, 2018, 09:20:55 PMThere are usually more birds around than what you actually see. And 1 Tom can breed quite a few hens. One thing you could do this fall to help is set some traps for predators. Opossum and Raccoons are hard on nests and coyotes and bobcats are superb turkey killers.My thoughts exactly! Even a jake will get the hens bred. Passing on gobblers where I hunt is an open invitation for a trespasser to come on in and kill him/them. If you've got hens then you'll have gobblers at some point in the season.Trap those predators if you want to save the turkeys. They do more hen, nest, and poult damage than most other problems combined.