One More
#3
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 202
Likes: 0
From: Baton Rouge La.
Im not sure what calls you are packing now, but I would go with something different, like a wingbone, or maybe a tube call. These calls have a unique sound and can often get that old lockjawed bird to fire off.
Tate, wingbone is pretty easy to make. I have made a few. Save your next gobblers wing and I'll get you some plans on how to make one. A goblers wing does make a little bit deeper sound than a hens, but dont come accross too many hens around here.
Tate, wingbone is pretty easy to make. I have made a few. Save your next gobblers wing and I'll get you some plans on how to make one. A goblers wing does make a little bit deeper sound than a hens, but dont come accross too many hens around here.
#6
I've recently started to make my own calls. Experimenting is part of the fun. Getting a good bird with a call I made myself has almost gotten to be an obsession to me. Call it moving to a new plateau in turkey hunting (note that I didn't say "higher"
. Even if it sounds like every other call out there, it is still something dirrerent, at least to me.
To date, I've made a wingbone, and friction calls out of a turtle shell, cedar, and crab-apple (the tree blew over on my buddy's fence, so I stole a log off the burn pile and let it season for a year. I just finished it and it sounds pretty good. I gave it to him last Monday and he loved it.)
. Even if it sounds like every other call out there, it is still something dirrerent, at least to me.To date, I've made a wingbone, and friction calls out of a turtle shell, cedar, and crab-apple (the tree blew over on my buddy's fence, so I stole a log off the burn pile and let it season for a year. I just finished it and it sounds pretty good. I gave it to him last Monday and he loved it.)



