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Started by Bowslinger, April 14, 2020, 04:36:46 PM
Quote from: Tomfoolery on April 25, 2020, 10:31:58 AM. The land I hunt on has many a roads through it so the idea of walking deep is not an option... the farther you get from one road, the closer you get to another.
Quote from: GobbleNut on April 27, 2020, 11:30:54 AMA lot of folks tend to categorize turkey hunting difficulty using "public" or "private" as their baselines. Simply put, that is flawed reasoning. Personally, my baselines are the amount of hunting pressure an area receives, whether public or private, and also the turkey densities in the area I am hunting. All other things being equal, the factor that most directly affects turkey hunting success (or failure) is the amount of hunting pressure put on any given area whether it be public or private. That "all other things being equal" factor is the wild card. Private land hunters have some level of control over things like guys calling to turkeys pre-season, or worse yet, calling at turkeys they see from the road out the window of their vehicle,...or setting up their campsite under the roost tree,...or any number of other "you just made 'em harder to kill" antics.
Quote from: g8rvet on April 27, 2020, 01:19:32 PMThat lease sucked. They all deer hunted the turkeys. We crossed over a creek one time and called the bird in and killed him. You would have thought we kicked their dogs because we did not "check in" to the other spot (no one was there, it was mid week).
Quote from: mtns2hunt on April 23, 2020, 10:36:32 PMPublic land is and always will be more difficult to hunt than private. I love the mountains but they are extemely hard to hunt. Game can be scarce and you may have limited oppertunites so better make them count. Make sure you know how to call when hunting turkeys and have scouted a lot preseason. Hiking away from trail heads or roads is time consuming and will wear one down quickly over time. Weather is often unpredictable and combined with difficult terain can take its toll. Being in good shape will make a hunt easier, climbing, lifting weight and cutting wood are some of the prepartations I use to get conditioned. I also shoot year around both shotguns and rifles. Nothing is more depressing than to miss a shot after days of hunting public land.I am talking about the East not some DIY hunt out West. I have hunted Wyoming, Montana, New Mexico and Canada and they can be difficult. In the East I hunt the Jefferson and George Washington NF about 1.6 million acres. I don't know about all the "heros" on here but hunting can be down right miserable at times. However, success can be sweet.I seldom find pressured birds on public land I hunt because I hike in very early and through the use of maps, GPS and scouting key in on areas that seldom if ever see a hunter. I do hunt presured birds on private land because of all the neaibors. Sorry about the long post but what I frequently read on here so often varies from my experience of public land hunting. Its very hard but completly doable. I just never hear about the sweat, blood, blisters, sore muscles, bottles of tylenol, bad weather, days of seeing no game that I have experienced. Maybe I am doing something wrong like setting my goals or standards too high but when success occurs it is sweet and I can just smile at all the folks riding the roads that never really understand what hunting public is all about. I do understand that obligations such as family or work can limit ones time to prepare or even hunt public land but with the current Corona Virus making its impact now is the perfect time to hit public land. This means even if you just pick a trail and start walking. No telling what is around the next bend. So RiverRoost I highly suggest you give it a try.