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Favorite way to hunt turkeys
What is your favorite way to hunt turkeys. Running and gunning, in a blind with a bow, in big open fields spotting and stalking or some other method?
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Spot and stalk is the way to go , Cant beat the adrenilin rush of a gobbler going off 20 yrds in front of you and all that seperates you from his eyes is your choice in camo , Cant wait .
GE |
Put em to bed and set up on them in the morning.
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I start out where I know they roost and then run and gun the rest of the day if I don't get any coming in within the first hour or so. Glassing field with binoculars to find them also comes into play as the day wears on.
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Run and gun. I can't sit still.
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I set up in the roost area then run and gun then end the day by setting up in the roost area again, most of my turks have been taken in the afternoon.
I travel light so I can move now, not in a few min or 15 min but right when I need to. I usually hunt the Rocky's in the timber or small openings this year I will be TAKING my first Rio on the plains. ( if you claim it you make it happen) I hope! I was planning on my first bow hunt for this spring season but may not make it till fall so I'll prob. us my old faithful Rem 12 again this spring. :fighting0007: |
Run and gun.
I start off in the pre-dawn, listening for gobbles while thet're still roosted. Then locate a set-up site. Pre-season scouting helps A LOT! |
Originally Posted by RPD63
(Post 4027359)
Put em to bed and set up on them in the morning.
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I use to run and gun but since Ive gotten older and have slowed down, I prefer to sit and be patient in a blind. But then again I have scouted the area for sometime and basically know whats up with the turkeys.
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Originally Posted by RPD63
(Post 4027359)
Put em to bed and set up on them in the morning.
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Im a run and gunner, I will put them to bed and start off like anyone else, but if that dont work I will cover some ground and find one that wants to play.
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My favorite - roost one night before and then have it pitch to within 20 yards, never seeing me at all until it is too late !!! Been at this for 40+ years .... have had this happen maybe 20 +/- times. Most of the birds, by far, I have killed have been 2-3 hours after daybreak, after lots of hard work. Oddly enough last 5-6 years I have had very good luck in mid afternoon calling toms gobblers into range on or near food plots.
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After many years I have learned if you hunt public like I do, forget about trying to call one in. I have a lot of other hunters running & gunning into me. Have found the best defense is to identify busy strutting areas and get there early. Set up my Avians where they can be seen from the longest distance..........by both toms and hunters! I will use a blind if weather is dicey or no ideal tree to back up against.
Also, have a plan B, C & D in case someone else beats me to A. I generally scout the properties well and know where birds tend to frequent. I look for the biggest open field with the shortest cover, adjacent to tall stands of roosting timber. Generally it's just a matter of time. If another hunter sees my setup, they always move on quickly. I get all my runnin & gunnin out of the way in February & March while scouting. Always have many dependable good set up spots due to the scouting. I get my bird or two every year. |
That's way too boring for me Zim. If I can't hear them gobbling and work a bird in, it just isn't much fun for me. I do have to say that I did see a big longbeard with four hens late one day out in a field and he would not leave them for my call. It was late in the season and I love the meat, so I ended up using the terrain and cover and wacked him about an hour later as he came by a big maple tree out in the field following his hens to the roost. It wasn't quite as thrilling as calling the way I like to do it, but I have to say I felt pretty good about being able to get close enough to 5 birds to shoot him with their vision and alert habits to danger of all types.
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I live in the Chicago burbs and the public land anywhere within 2 hours of here is so heavily pressured, the toms are just way too wary. You run & gun here and you will find another hunter very quickly. Found similar results in overhunted public in Missouri & Wisconsin. I did find a few very remote spots where I was actually able to work birds, and in those situations I do so. But I'm never going back there to Missouri since they raised their NR prices. Haha last time there I found 2 toms roosted just off the public. I called them in immediately from ~300 yards to 20, gobbling all the way, until they walked within 2 feet of the public land border. They even saw my decoy, but refused to cross the line.
Due to the number of hunters here, you are only going to get one decent early season tag instate. That is it. The rest get taken in the lotteries. So best option is to go up in Wisconsin, where I can buy all I like.........but all late seasons........5th & 6th. The birds are very well educated by then, but there are a lot of toms still there. I do always get to hear tons of gobbling, and see strutting and all the rest. And I don't have to worry about rain. So it's good enough for me. Just the way it is when all your options involve heavily pressured toms. |
That's what's good about hunting up where I do as I hardly ever see another hunter and it does make one heck of a difference. You ought to buy a guaranteed tag for over here (134 hunt that's OTC until May1) and spend a few days with me up at my place ---open invitation to ya if you'd care to! It starts May 6 through the end of the month.
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Originally Posted by Arrowmaster
(Post 4027743)
I use to run and gun but since Ive gotten older and have slowed down, I prefer to sit and be patient in a blind. But then again I have scouted the area for sometime and basically know whats up with the turkeys.
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Originally Posted by Topgun 3006
(Post 4028800)
That's way too boring for me Zim. If I can't hear them gobbling and work a bird in, it just isn't much fun for me.
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Originally Posted by superstrutter
(Post 4028866)
Topgun, you know as well as I that many times a gobbler will come in silent. I love to hear a gobbling tom also, but it's almost as much fun working that silent bird in as one gobbling his head off. Sometimes I like a silent tom. At least less experienced hunters may think there are no birds in the area and move on. BTW, I love it all, sit and call, run and gun, and spot and stalk.
TG, Thanks but Michigan is off limits for me to go for hunting. It's far enough, but being on the far west side the traffic looping around the pond is brutal. We went up to Big Rapids last summer to work on my nephew's cottage and I was crabby all weekend! Dang it was like a 5 hour drive or something. From my place I can drive one hour NW and be in the WI birds. Also over there once you buy your license you can add all the leftover tags you want for just $15/ea. I won't drive very far for a bird. :) |
Originally Posted by RPD63
(Post 4027359)
Put em to bed and set up on them in the morning.
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Set up by their roost then run and gun till they stop gobbling. Then I like to sit in fields and blind hunt.
Posted from Huntingnet.com App for Android |
Any way I can convince a youth or beginning hunter to go! I love to get new people involved in this great sport! If they want to sit and wait or run and gun its ok with me!
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Set up on them in the morning. After that, that's when it gets fun to me. I've got a good hunting bud, like most of you, but we kind of pride ourselves on doing whatever it takes to get em! Lol!! If its waiting on a field in the rain all day or crawling down a pine row to get close enough to shoot.....guess my favorite way is just freakin turkey hunting!
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I used to run and gun but my old knees are shot so now if I don't have any luck at flydown I will get in a strut area and sit and call every 20 min or so. I have killed a lot of silent birds that way.
When I was younger I would get after them. One morning comes to mind. It was one of them cold late March mornings and our first stop didn't work out. We move and get one gobblin. The only problem was that he was across the creek. We waded that cold creek with water up to our necks,got set up and killed him in short order. Them ones you have to work your tail off to get is sweet. |
plan b
i kinda agree with efh. start out with some sort of a plan, be flexible and do what it takes, be there, have fun, it's your outdoors. don't try and match wits with a turkey, they don't have any, just try and be a little smarter as every day is different and if you think you have it all figured out you are a novice with the same wits as ol' tom. remember, ya can't out think something that can't think, don't even try, time in the woods is what works year after year. luck sometimes, but time
cheers |
I like to be in the woods prior to dawn and locate gobblers on the roost. If they are fairly far off I close the distance and pick a setup site. I have had occassions when I had to run and gun in order to outwit some very smart gobblers. On one run and gun I had a first time turkey hunter shoot a 22lb 11" bearded gobbler that I called in that was traveling with another big gobbler.
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