only use regular PayPal to provide purchase protection
Started by CrankyTom, May 18, 2020, 05:09:55 PM
Quote from: GobbleNut on May 27, 2020, 10:15:33 AMThis entire discussion begs the question as to how the researchers determined that all turkeys can, or cannot, hear certain frequencies? As others here have stated, there is a lot of non-scientific, circumstantial evidence that suggests that maybe,...just maybe,...the study does not reflect reality. Now, don't get me wrong,...I really don't have a dog in this fight either way. I think the entire concept of turkeys and hearing ability is interesting,...but I am personally not going to put much stock in it in terms of how I go about calling turkeys. For me, they either answer or they don't,...and they either come or they don't. I'm not going to try to make it any more complicated than that.
Quote from: Ihuntoldschool on May 27, 2020, 06:26:59 PMHere is the bottom line. We are going to continue using the calls that we have found successful over many years and on many gobblers regardless of whether they fit into your agenda or what you want to push on us with your technical studies. If you want to make it complicated then have at it. The majority of us will keep things simple and continue to use what has worked well over the years. Your studies contradict previous studies and research that was done 25 plus years ago as I pointed out in an earlier post. It's ludicrous and downright comical for you to suggest all the longbeards we called in on calls that don't fit your little narrow frequency range came all the way in to the shotgun out of curiosity over an unknown sound. The fact is they came in looking for the hen they heard, gobbling their way in in response to our hen calls, many of which if we are to believe what you're selling could not even be heard by the turkeys. You should by all means use what works for you and what you have confidence in. But you're wasting your time trying to sell us on your agenda, we ain't buying what you're selling.
Quote from: CrankyTom on May 27, 2020, 05:19:10 PMOther sounds below 290hz and above 5250hz do nothing. Nothing shows up ever but if I switch to the hearing frequency range they show up.
Quote from: Rapscallion Vermilion on May 27, 2020, 08:18:42 PMQuote from: CrankyTom on May 27, 2020, 05:19:10 PMOther sounds below 290hz and above 5250hz do nothing. Nothing shows up ever but if I switch to the hearing frequency range they show up. I have made countless spectrograms over the years of both real turkeys calling and various types of turkey calls run by a number of different talented callers. The vast majority of real turkey calls and their imitations have almost zero content below 290 Hz and above 5250 Hz. So there is little anyone needs to be concerned about. One interesting exception is the spit and drum. The spit, has some very high frequency content, and the drum is around 100 Hz or less. I do have some questions/concerns about the studies you have cited. Were they performed on wild turkeys or domestic turkeys? I don't know that there would be a big difference, but there could be. Are the low and high frequency limits in those charts just the limit of what was actually tested? Both Tom Kelly and Kenny Morgan recall, in their books, personal experiences of watching turkeys suddenly get alarmed and it was on the order of a minute or two before they heard what the turkeys heard. In both cases, the low frequency sound of a vehicle approaching. I expect many on here have had similar experiences, which argues against the claim that wild turkeys have less sensitive hearing than humans do.
Quote from: CrankyTom on May 27, 2020, 08:34:38 PMThe frequencies in the charts is what they hear it is not what ranges were tested.
Quote from: larry9988 on May 27, 2020, 09:49:51 PMI am very interested in all of this. Could you post a sound file of some of the sounds you have used to call in whole flocks. I have eastern turkeys that I hatched from eggs three springs ago and they make some sounds we probably will never here in a typical hunting environment. One of my hens has started this growling thing that I had never heard before this spring.
Quote from: CrankyTom on May 27, 2020, 08:58:53 PMThe charts show a U shape. It's not like they just cut off they taper off.The newer chart was from a study that was done many years after the other study. I'm assuming with better equipment?
Quote from: Rapscallion Vermilion on May 27, 2020, 11:02:29 PMQuote from: CrankyTom on May 27, 2020, 08:58:53 PMThe charts show a U shape. It's not like they just cut off they taper off.The newer chart was from a study that was done many years after the other study. I'm assuming with better equipment?That's my point. It doesn't make sense to apply a sharp cutoff to the frequencies at which they can hear. The newer paper goes down to 125 Hz. I doubt a turkey's hearing suddenly stops there either. As mentioned in one of the papers I found, the so-called limits are determined by setting an arbitrary dB threshold. A 2004 paper I found puts the upper "limit" of a turkey's hearing at 6600 Hz.
Quote from: CrankyTom on May 27, 2020, 11:26:36 PMWhere do you see 125 hz? Where it says center frequency 1.22 khz? 1.22 kHz = 1,220 hz
Quote from: Rapscallion Vermilion on May 27, 2020, 11:43:50 PMQuote from: CrankyTom on May 27, 2020, 11:26:36 PMWhere do you see 125 hz? Where it says center frequency 1.22 khz? 1.22 kHz = 1,220 hzThe newer chart, which you said shows the frequencies at which the turkeys have been shown to hear, has data down to .125 KHz (125 Hz). What you are calling the "lower limit" was determined by an arbitrary dB threshold.
Quote from: CrankyTom on May 27, 2020, 11:58:40 PMQuote from: Rapscallion Vermilion on May 27, 2020, 11:43:50 PMQuote from: CrankyTom on May 27, 2020, 11:26:36 PMWhere do you see 125 hz? Where it says center frequency 1.22 khz? 1.22 kHz = 1,220 hzThe newer chart, which you said shows the frequencies at which the turkeys have been shown to hear, has data down to .125 KHz (125 Hz). What you are calling the "lower limit" was determined by an arbitrary dB threshold.The lower limit on the chart says 0.29 Khz 0.29 Khz = 290 Hz. The center frequency says 1.22 Khz. 1.22 Khz = 1,220 Hz. I don't know what you mean by an arbitrary threshold? What I see is that they can hear 290 Hz at 60 db and 2,000 Hz at about 15 db and about 5,000 Hz at 60 db. Above 60 db is harmful and hurts. The charts are pretty clear, both charts show a range of frequencies that the turkeys can hear. The older chart shows the frequencies that humans with good hearing can hear.