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Started by Sir-diealot, September 12, 2018, 11:43:26 PM
Quote from: Greg Massey on September 13, 2018, 12:51:58 AMSafety and hunting tactics is your key. Your calling does not have to be perfect, just the right CADENCE's in your yelps, cuts and clucks can make all the difference in successful hunt. Scouting and having turkeys to hunt helps a lot ... Spending time in the woods is your best learning experience with turkeys . Practice , Practice, practice with your calls, with the right cadence and understand what a turkey is telling you in return. You don't have to be a good caller at all, but you do need a basic understanding of turkey language ... Patience's kills more turkeys ... hard to learn all of this in a book.... You need boots on the ground and time in the field with turkeys .. Can't hunt twice a year and expect to be successful .... Hunt as much as you can ... books are good , but time in the field and first hand experience with turkeys is your answer. Your better off having 3 - 4 good calls instead of 10 bad calls.. If you can afford buying call , looking into getting custom calls regardless if your a beginner or season hunter.. call makes and custom calls can improve you hunt and calling ability ....
Quote from: Sir-diealot on September 13, 2018, 01:23:47 AMQuote from: Greg Massey on September 13, 2018, 12:51:58 AMSafety and hunting tactics is your key. Your calling does not have to be perfect, just the right CADENCE's in your yelps, cuts and clucks can make all the difference in successful hunt. Scouting and having turkeys to hunt helps a lot ... Spending time in the woods is your best learning experience with turkeys . Practice , Practice, practice with your calls, with the right cadence and understand what a turkey is telling you in return. You don't have to be a good caller at all, but you do need a basic understanding of turkey language ... Patience's kills more turkeys ... hard to learn all of this in a book.... You need boots on the ground and time in the field with turkeys .. Can't hunt twice a year and expect to be successful .... Hunt as much as you can ... books are good , but time in the field and first hand experience with turkeys is your answer. Your better off having 3 - 4 good calls instead of 10 bad calls.. If you can afford buying call , looking into getting custom calls regardless if your a beginner or season hunter.. call makes and custom calls can improve you hunt and calling ability ....Can't say I disagree, books can be a great place to start though.
Quote from: Sir-diealot on September 13, 2018, 02:05:51 AMEven Primos employees put out books, I guess the experts must know a bit more than you. Have a nice night.
Quote from: Greg Massey on September 13, 2018, 09:59:39 AMQuote from: Sir-diealot on September 13, 2018, 02:05:51 AMEven Primos employees put out books, I guess the experts must know a bit more than you. Have a nice night.Regardless books are good, but you can get a lot of knowledge from the internet and forums just like this one ..Old Gobbler ... yes i agree the experts know a lot more than you also... you have a good day...
Quote from: GobbleNut on September 13, 2018, 01:41:08 PMI'm sure the book would be an interesting read, but with today's calling devices and easily available information sources, turkey calling is the easy part. learning what and how much to say to a turkey,...and when to say it,...is the more difficult aspect of turkey hunting, and that comes mainly from experience under a broad spectrum of hunting conditions and circumstances. Of course, there is nothing wrong with gleaning as much information as you can from other folks calling methods, but anybody that thinks their success or failure in turkey hunting is based primarily on their calling ability,...unless they are just totally clueless and inept with a call,...is probably focusing their efforts in the wrong place.Even if you have enough experience and know the fundamentals, each encounter with a gobbler can be different in terms of what is going to "trip their trigger". In any given situation,...and with any given gobbler,... a hunter may be able to do just about anything and have the bird come. On the other hand, there are also birds out there that you can be perfect in terms of your calling, your set-up, and every other element of the hunt, and those birds are going to avoid being killed.Over time, a "student" of turkey hunting will develop a "feel" for what he needs to do in a given set of circumstances. Dissecting one's successes and failures over many seasons of turkey hunting, and then applying the appropriate tactics and calling in similar situations is the best we can do. After that, success is almost totally a function of being on a gobbler that wants to do his part and cooperate.The moral of the story: Learn to call and be the best you can be, but don't get "hung up" on the importance of calling. It is much more important to spend time in the woods learning about the birds you are hunting, their interactions, and how they "talk" to each other.
Quote from: GobbleNut on September 13, 2018, 05:31:35 PMFrom the Table of Contents, it looks like a good read for the avid turkey hunter. Hopefully, a few of the participants here will read it and we can have a comprehensive review of the work. I have personally read so many "how to" books on turkey hunting that I have kind-of gotten away from it, but I admire anyone that will put in the time and effort to write a book about it. That takes a great dedication to the craft.
Quote from: guesswho on September 13, 2018, 07:12:06 PMI wish I had the attention span to read, but I don't. I think I've read one book my entire life and it was a short one. The only reason I managed to get through it was because a friend of mine wrote it. He was an uncover game warden for years and wrote it after he retired. I had seen a lot of the uncover videos of cases that are in the book so that held my interest for short periods of time. Still took me about 3 months to get through it. The book you listed looks like it could be informative. If it helps you in any way then it's worth reading. The good thing about turkey hunting is there may be 2 or 3 reactions to a situation that works in your favor, and a hundred that doesn't. And those reactions can swap sides from one bird to another. What worked yesterday may bite you in the rear the next day. Most important thing I've learned is the hunt isn't over just because your initial reaction failed. Don't give up and go on to plan B, then C. I've ran the alphabet and not killed a bird, and I've killed them from A to Z. Glad you enjoyed the book. I hope it helps you on future hunt.
Quote from: guesswho on September 13, 2018, 07:12:06 PMIThe good thing about turkey hunting is there may be 2 or 3 reactions to a situation that works in your favor, and a hundred that doesn't. And those reactions can swap sides from one bird to another. What worked yesterday may bite you in the rear the next day. Most important thing I've learned is the hunt isn't over just because your initial reaction failed. Don't give up and go on to plan B, then C. I've ran the alphabet and not killed a bird, and I've killed them from A to Z.