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Started by Sir-diealot, September 12, 2018, 11:43:26 PM
Quote from: Happy on September 17, 2018, 08:32:09 PMBooks are great and I will not knock them but experience trumps it all in my opinion. You can understand the basics of turkey language but until you work birds and begin to understand the nuances of their responses I don't think you start to really get it. It is a constant game of learning and getting a feel for it. Picking up on a toms mood and calling accordingly will go a long way. Still sounding like the most sexy hen on the planet won't help much if your in the wrong location. I am far from a master but working birds and even calling in hens has taught me more than books have. Heck I still get in wrong sometimes but that is what I love about it. You can practice your whole life and not be good. It's not until you have played a few games that it starts to come together and make sense.
Quote from: NCL on September 18, 2018, 09:11:47 AMAt a stage in life where I realize how much I do not know, the more I learn the more I realize how much more I need to learn. All source of knowledge are good but applying that knowledge in the field is the acid test. Each year I think I have made every mistake in turkey hunting that is possible and I manager to discover a new mistake. The learning process is a big reason why I go back each year, well there are several other reasons but for this discussion the learning is the big one.
Quote from: silvestris on October 15, 2018, 02:17:52 PM Once one learns to find them, set up on them and hide properly and then learns to perform those actions naturally, calling is everything.I agree. Time in the field is the greatest teacher. This will be my 51st season and I learn something new every time I am in the field.
Quote from: bobk on December 11, 2018, 01:12:00 PMQuote from: silvestris on October 15, 2018, 02:17:52 PM Once one learns to find them, set up on them and hide properly and then learns to perform those actions naturally, calling is everything.I agree. Time in the field is the greatest teacher. This will be my 51st season and I learn something new every time I am in the field.
Quote from: silvestris on October 15, 2018, 02:17:52 PM Once one learns to find them, set up on them and hide properly and then learns to perform those actions naturally, calling is everything.I agree.
Quote from: GobbleNut on December 12, 2018, 11:27:57 AMQuote from: bobk on December 11, 2018, 01:12:00 PMQuote from: silvestris on October 15, 2018, 02:17:52 PM Once one learns to find them, set up on them and hide properly and then learns to perform those actions naturally, calling is everything.I agree. Time in the field is the greatest teacher. This will be my 51st season and I learn something new every time I am in the field.All other things being equal,...that is, your set-up, positioning, mind-set of the bird (or birds) you are talking to,...then, yes, I agree that "calling is everything". The problem with that simple, three-word statement is that a lot of turkey hunters do not have the experience to understand what we mean when making that statement.It seems a lot of hunters interpret that to mean that they need to sound like the championship-level callers they see in contests and on the internet. That interpretation is entirely off-base. While it's true that one needs to sound like a "real" turkey, the fact is that the spectrum of what "real" turkeys sound like is all over the chart. "Calling is everything" means that a hunter needs to understand when, what, and how to say something to a gobbler more-so than meeting some fictional standard of calling prowess. Yell at a gobbler when he wants you to whisper to him (or vice-versa), no matter how realistic your yelling sounds, and he is likely to shut the hell up and say "adios".Coaxing a gobbler to you, in many cases, requires interpreting his state-of-mind and then talking to him in the manner that he thinks he should be talked to. As bobk and other have inferred, that mainly comes from experience,...not necessarily calling ability.
Quote from: 1iagobblergetter on January 27, 2019, 01:16:08 AMI learned alot in the beginnings years ago through reading books which started another addiction of collecting them. Lots of ways to learn,but nothing wrong with a good book if you have the time. Not all are how to's and can also make you a better turkey hunter.