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Old 04-26-2009 | 03:39 PM
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SwampCollie
Nontypical Buck
 
Joined: Nov 2006
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From: Where the ducks don't come no more
Default RE: I don't get it

ORIGINAL: JW!

Pay special attention to the weather and temperature.

Temperature drops - cause birds to be less active.

Or

The Tom may be henned so bad that he won't gobble or even worse yet - he is in someone's freezer!

But if you heard multiple birds gobbling - temp drop did it.

JW
Temp drops in the south usually have an opposite effect in my opinion JW. Some of the most wild gobbling mornings I have experienced have been during a late spring frost. I think that the barometric pressure might have something to do with it.... but I don't think science even knows for sure. I don't evenknow whether its better up or down either.... I'm going either way if I can though.

BT:

Nothing shuts gobblers up faster (being dead aside) than excessive pressure.... be it from hunters or yard dogs or whatever. Even when birds are henned up hard they will still gobble like mad as the hens lead them away from you. Sometimes they won't gobble at all. Figure that out and I'll bet you could make a million dollars.

The other thing that shuts them up is actually breeding hens, not being with hens.. but 'being with' hens. At the risk of being making myself look like a typical guy here let me throw you an example (remember.... I'm really just beinging honest... so any women that read this... here is a no non-sense peek into the male mind, both turkey and human).... I'll answer my cell phone when I'm out at the bar with a girl or with my friends... sure....heck it might be another girl with a better or more promising offer.....but if I'm at home (wink wink) with a girl or even on a serious date.... it doesn't matter who is calling... I'm indisposed and she has my full attention.Turkeys and humans really do have a bit in common.... but thats as far as I'm going today.

As far as your strategy goes, the other day when that bird strutted in the field... he just drew a line. He can't strutt in tall wheat... and he won't go someplace he can't strutt... not to a hot hen anyway. The path thehen walked on and that he went down is probably a fairly common travel corridor they use..... solution... make sure its in range. I'm not going to say you overcalled to that bird... but if he wasgobbling at you everytime and cutting you off everytime... you probably did it. I have gotten birds to come through super tall wheat, across canals, over fences, through cutovers even... but it is NEVER super hard calling that does it... not in our part of the world. Curiosity is our best ally in your situation. If you get him to come through that wheat thinking a hen might have traveled that way instead... he'd do it... but he is used to having hens come to him.... and in a good spot to show off.... hefurled his sails and dropped anchor.

One thing you have to keep in mind when its hot too... is just like yourself... the birds will like the shade.... and they will want water. We've had a fair bit of rain lately,but there is probably one spot they favor... and thats what I'd find if the birds are being hush and its hot outside. Those often used travel ways.... if they are on the shady side (west facing) of the field.... thats probably where they'll walk... maybe even just in the treeline. But water is where I'd focus myefforts.
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