i started turkey hunting when today's retro camo patterns when the "brand new" clothes. i lived in north LA where there were just a tiny handful of turkey hunters. 2 men i hunted all year around with taught me the ropes. they said that cedar was "the best" wood for box calls. and we all know "best" is defined as that person's prefferance.
the first box i bought was one i bought from doug camp at the only national NWTF show. it had a cedar lid and sides, with black walnut bottom and front and rear wedges. i lost it during a hunt and bought another just like it.
btw - both calls sounded subtlely different if runnuing in the right or left side. does that make it a 2-sided call, or do you need 2 different sound chambers, or...?
after a few months of closely following a couple of turkey boards i now know that good calls are made of all sorts of materials. when folks write about cedar calls they typically mention it giving raspiness. is this the cedar that makes it raspy?
i rarely see pushpin, pot, or whatever calls made from cedar. is that due to not looking as nice as other woods, or does the cedar not sound very good in the other-than-box calls?
so to sum it up -
- how is cedar as a sidewall and even lid wood for a box
- why is it not used nery often on custom calls?
- why is it not used very often on other-than-box calls?
- what exactly is a "2-sided" box call?
thanks for yall's help on the matter!