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Started by Papa, April 25, 2020, 12:30:02 PM
Quote from: Greg Massey on April 25, 2020, 01:20:48 PMI was always told by the old timers if you can hear him , he can hear you..
Quote from: idgobble on April 25, 2020, 04:10:54 PMIt takes sound 4.6 seconds to travel one mile, call it roughly 5 seconds. Gobblers often gobble as soon as they hear a yelp, at least within a second. So, if the gobbler answers in one second and it takes 11 seconds for you to hear the gobble after the yelp begins you can assume it's about one mile away. Use that info to estimate distance to the gobbler. Once, I was showing my buddy how loud I could call with a box and we heard a distant gobble. We were in the Black Hills of WY right on the border and the gobble came from SD. We experimented and figured he was about 1.3 miles away across a deep canyon because we'd hear the gobble 14 seconds (by our watch) after I started my yelp. We were talking for a few minutes and he said , "Try that again and let's see if we can hear him again." The gobble came back faster and I said, "I think he's coming to us!" We timed it and it was taking 10 seconds. We started looking with our binocs and saw 3 gobblers coming at a fast trot and down into the canyon about a mile away. As they came closer we kept watching them gobble and timing the answers and guessing the distance with our eyes to confirm our distance estimates right up until they popped into sight on top of our side about 200 yards away. Saved us the expense of buying a SD licence and tag. Over the years we did that a couple more times. I like calling turkeys in from adjoining states. When calling from a boat on a large reservoir I've done the same distance estimating. Sound travels great over water. Sometimes we've boated up the reservoir and spotted the gobbler on shore.
Quote from: guesswho on April 25, 2020, 03:37:45 PMHIS eyes and ears are about equally matched, if that tells you anything.