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Started by tlh2865, March 20, 2020, 03:31:35 PM
Quote from: Tom007 on March 20, 2020, 05:06:09 PMGreat thread. Maybe you guys can let me know how old this guy was. In early 2000's, I harvested this NJ Gobbler. Very unique hunt, started him at 7:00 am, got him at 10:00 am. He had a very weird gobble, kinda of Jake like, high pitched. Very reluctant to show himself, I chased him 1/2 mile or so, repositioning several times. Finally, I got him to 30 yards. He weighed 22 pounds, the picture shows the beard and spurs. His feet were very prehistoric, crusty looking. His waddle has that brown spot. He looked different than any Gobbler I have ever seen. I welcome the forums thoughts on his age, thanks.... be safe
Quote from: crow on March 20, 2020, 10:08:59 PMTom Horn, I rode most of the Chisholm trail with him back in the old days
Quote from: wvmntnhick on March 20, 2020, 06:07:16 PMHis name is Tom Shone. He used to come in with my uncle to bow hunt our farm every year during the last week of October. Haven't seen him in years. I guess he's still alive. Gotta be in his late 60's I'd imagine. Maybe older. That's funnySent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: eggshell on March 21, 2020, 10:10:06 AMI'll share what I know on age. I ran a turkey check station for thirty + years and we checked banded birds from a research project. The first thing I'd say is just throw spur length out as a definitive aging tool. It will get you close, but past year two is totally an estimate. Jakes have a button, two years old 1/2 -3/4" with no curve, after that it's hard to tell. The spurs will start to curve some by year three and hook more as they age. So I'd say after three it's a +/- one or two years estimate. I can think of one instance where two hunters came in with banded birds from the same area. One bird had 1 1/4 slightly hooked spurs and the other had 1" straight spurs. Everyone guessed the old hook spur was at least a year older. I called the research center with the tag numbers and they informed me both birds were tagged as jakes at the same time and were both the same age. That same study showed that birds followed from jakes lived an average of three years before they were killed by hunters, on public ground. Private ground would probably have older birds. Gobbler mortality is high on hunted birds. We are far more efficient than we think we are. The oldest bird of verified age in that study was 8 or 9 if I remember right. From what I saw with known age banded birds, I wouldn't bet on any age over 3. Spur length and curve is most likely more a genetic issue then age in my opinion.
Quote from: LaLongbeard on March 21, 2020, 02:25:39 PMI never heard a single person in the southeast call a Gobbler a Tom until it started being common on the utube hunting videos. Never in a book never in a magazine it was always a yankee term. First time I heard it in person was in Pennsylvania years ago. But here in the south it's always been Longbeard or Gobbler a Tom was a cat.
Quote from: Turkeyman on March 21, 2020, 03:57:21 PMQuote from: LaLongbeard on March 21, 2020, 02:25:39 PMI never heard a single person in the southeast call a Gobbler a Tom until it started being common on the utube hunting videos. Never in a book never in a magazine it was always a yankee term. First time I heard it in person was in Pennsylvania years ago. But here in the south it's always been Longbeard or Gobbler a Tom was a cat.Well, I'm a "Yankee" and I always used to refer to age groups as either jakes or adult birds, not too often longbeards. Then I noticed quite a few guys referred to them as either jakes or toms. So I sort of adopted that. Thus, to me, they're all "gobblers" (although quite a few guys use this to refer to >1 YO), "jakes" are obvious, anything older is either "toms" or "longbeards". But in the end who really gives a rat's behind!