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Started by Woodhaven, April 20, 2019, 10:21:15 PM
Quote from: guesswho on April 22, 2019, 10:32:14 AMMy opinion. I've seen it here in Bama and Georgia for several years. Simple math is your biggest enemy. Everybody wants to blame the yotes, bobcats and nest robbers. Birds have been faced with that from day one. The simple math I mentioned. More and more hunters, less and less suitable habitat. Then factor in a turkey isn't that hard to kill in the spring. States allow way to many aides to hunt a bird that isn't that hard to kill to begin with, blinds, decoys etc. So more people, less suitable habitat, long seasons in the South and numerous aides to make even a novice a successful turkey hunter. And throw in the desire to post hero shots and videos on social media. When I do the math I come up with less turkeys. Again, just my opinion and I'm a crazy old man.
Quote from: LaLongbeard on April 21, 2019, 02:06:10 PMWe are in the same situation here in Louisiana. The game and fish dept. blames habitat loss etc. but some of the places I hunt had turkeys and now don't with zero change to habitat. This season I walked and scouted/hunted huge areas of NF that has a control burning program and some food plots planted. Zero tracks Zero gobbling on consecutive good mornings just no turkeys. I agree the hogs are a contributing factor. You'd have to hunt an area with a high hog population to appreciate there impact. If there's one there's probably a hundred and they spend all day and night rooting around looking for something to eat. There's so many of them scouring the woods there going to make an impact. But I don't think hogs are the only issue some parts of La don't have a high hog population but still no turkeys. There are some small pockets of turkeys mostly on private land but not everywhere there's turkey habitat. I have to hunt longer and harder each season to kill one when I move on to other states it's almost unbelievable the amount of turkeys in some states. This season in La has about made my mind up to hunt other states and leave La be until something changes. They have moved the season opener into April so more hens will be bread before the Gobblers get hunted, maybe it will help but we need more than that. To address Gobbnuts suggestions, they are good ones if you could get someone to listen. I have repeatedly emailed and called the La wildlife and fisheries about what it would take to buy some turkeys from another state and prop up our dwindling populations. Only response I got was "all the availabile habitat has been stocked" maybe in 1980 but we need some more. A lot of people profess to be Turkey hunters and spend plenty of time fouling up the woods and messing others up, but would not spend a dime to help buy turkeys for transplant. As far as the NWTF I've never heard anything back. I think common sense would tell you that if you saturated a WMA with good habitat, with birds from another state and closed just that one WMA for a few years whatever the problem is predation, disease inbreeding whatever, would be offset by the new birds. Eventually the population would grow and spread out. If you did this just in the WMAs were the hunting could be controlled easier you'd see an increase. La original stocking program was stupid at best I have the numbers of how many birds were released per year and it was a joke dribbling 5 or 6 birds across a whole state isn't going to do anything.Example in 1962 the state of La released 1 turkey in the whole state 1. What is one turkey going to do? Other states were releasing 20 or so in one location. The thing is everyone wants to be a turkey hunter but no one wants to do anything to help but complain. I plan to try one last time to get an answer or some action. Good luck in Arkansas hope you have better luck than we have.
Quote from: Ihuntoldschool on April 25, 2019, 06:33:58 PMThe timber harvest is the biggest reason for the decline in the Southeast. In addition to that I agree with everything guesswho said. Get rid of those visual aids that some people use as a crutch who otherwise wouldn't be able to ever kill a turkey without their aid. Make it a challenge again. It's clear that the vast majority of hunters just want that easy kill at any cost with the use of any legal aid they can get their hands on. The turkey will withstand all other predators. Humans are the only real threat, in the form of logging and unfair hunting practices that tip the odds in the hunter's favor. Put the challenge back in turkey hunting. It's clear that most hunters are not willing to police themselves in this matter and regulation is necessary.
Quote from: GobbleNut on April 25, 2019, 03:55:57 PMHere's the deal, folks. Spring gobbler seasons exist for one reason only. Turkeys are polygamous. That means having a few gobblers is all you need to ensure breeding of the hens in the population,...which translates to the management idea that it is okay to harvest those surplus gobblers running around without impacting the turkey population. In addition, if the hunting season is set properly, hunting will not take place until the turkeys have had a chance to breed. After breeding has taken place, in theory, every single mature gobbler in a population could be harvested without impacting the resource,...IF there is annual recruitment (i.e...nesting success and poult survival to adulthood in most years).I am by no means a fan of killing too many of the adult gobblers in a population. At the same time, I suspect there are few, if any, places in this country where the gobbler population has been depleted by hunting to a level where the successful breeding of most of the breeding-age hens in a population is not taking place,...again, where hunting seasons are timed correctly (and probably even if they are not). The bottom line is that blaming spring gobbler hunting for declining turkey populations anywhere is totally misplaced. It can impact hunting quality to a point where spring gobbler hunting is almost a futile exercise for most hunters, but that is a different story altogether. However, when discussing turkey population declines, any discussion of harvest of male turkeys in the spring after breeding has taken place is a total waste of time.