Tag Archives: Eastern Wild turkey

Eastern Wild turkey and Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector

Hunting Wild Turkeys

The day started with a 3:30 am alarm after a nearly sleepless night. My knee hurt enough to keep me awake and make me grumpy. Then I pulled muscles in my back while getting ready to go. Wasn’t this just going to be a great time. We knew where the turkeys should be and I wasn’t missing out on a hunt.

We drove to a spot close to home, got our gear out, walked into a great spot and got ready. Steve set up our decoys, Ethel, Lucy and Ricky. This was going to be the morning I got my turkey…my first turkey. I settled against a hardwood tree and Steve moved further into the woods, behind a few feet and to the right. He was ten feet away.

Steve made the first call, a ye-GOBBLE-lp. A tom gobbled before the yelping was done. I smiled. This was my day.

Something scurried in the brush right behind me. Skunk? It’s always the first thing to come to mind when I’m on the ground and hear something in the brush. It moved away, and I stopped thinking about it until Steve said, “Rob, look at the rabbit.” A snowshoe hare ate while we hid in the brush.

After a few minutes of back and forth yelps and gobbles it became obvious that there was more than one bird. They weren’t in a rush to get close. Steve called for ten minutes, then suddenly got no response. After the third unanswered call I wondered if they were moving toward us faster or were done with us. Seven or eight minutes passed before I heard a gobble further away.

I’ve been disappointed so many times when hunting (I’ve shot only partridge so far), and completely blown the one chance I’d had to shoot a turkey two years ago, that I don’t get excited when I think I might be going to finally shoot. Still, it was a let down when the answer came from further away.  We didn’t have a lot of time this morning.

Movement in the woods caught my eye. I couldn’t see them, just movement through the brush. “Here they come!” I heard dead leaves rustle, watched, waited, watched, and was a little disappointed to see a whitetail doe step into a clearing. She looked at the decoys, first with her tail up, then down, her ears relaxed. “Deer,” I whispered so Steve could see her. He called again to find the turkeys, and it didn’t bother her. Then I moved, just a little, and she heard me. I stayed still while she stared. Busted. I was going to be busted by a deer. She took three steps toward me. Steve called again and this time, a loud round of gobbles came back. The deer continued to watch the decoys. There were several of them and they were much closer. After several minutes I moved to startle her, convincing her to leave before the turkeys were in sight. Flag (tail) up, she bolted toward the road, and a yearling I hadn’t been able to see followed her.

Steve called again and this time, a single tom gobbled back. It wasn’t from the birds we’d heard. This one was directly to my right and further away. I listened a couple of times and decided it was coming up the road behind us. Steve moved to put himself in position to shoot.

It didn’t occur to me that this wasn’t going to be my day after all. I was glad that Steve was going to get his first turkey of the year, and we’d be having turkey breast for supper.

This one meant business. He came into sight quickly, spotted Lucy, Ricky and Ethel, and strutted in circles, puffed up and displaying like he ruled the forest. Steve brought the shotgun up, ready to shoot as soon as the tom gave him an opportunity for a good shot. It walked down the narrow path, into the clearing, and I smiled. He was big.

Steve hesitated, lowered the gun a few inches, then picked it back up and looked down the barrel. It was interesting to watch this first hand rather than on television. I’ve never been with anyone when they’ve taken their turkey. The turkey walked directly into the clearing, neck stretched forward, head out for a perfect shot, and Steve lowered the gun.

He lowered the gun. He didn’t shoot.

The tom walked out of my sight, close to the decoys, and I didn’t see him again.

Turkeys came out of the trees to my left, which was then behind Steve, and into sight. I clicked off the safety and raised the shotgun, a Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector Steve gave me for my birthday last month. I made sure I didn’t have brush between myself and the birds. My strict rule: clean shot, or no shot at all. I counted twice; five jakes. They looked about the same size. No one bird seemed larger than the rest.

Steve hit the button on the call and gave another yelp.

Five jakes gobbled at once, 25 feet from me. That excited me. They hesitated as they looked at the big tom and three decoys 20 feet ahead of and to the right of me. Steve called again. One jake took the lead while the other four stayed still. I thought I’d wait until one bird stood directly in front of me so I could be sure I didn’t miss. The pattern is very tight with the turkey choke. I was turned to my left a bit. I could be patient, but opportunity knocked. One more call. The jake in the lead took a few more steps, put his head up straight and tall, and I pulled the trigger.

“I got him!”

“Where’d he go?”

“Right there!” He didn’t go anywhere but down. One clean, perfect shot to the head. He didn’t know what hit him.

Eastern Wild turkey and Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector

Eastern Wild turkey and Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector

I did it. I got my first turkey. It really was my day.

Eastern Wild turkey and Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector

I shot my first turkey today mostly thanks to Steve. Ya, I made a great shot that I’ll shamelessly brag about for a while but I got to make that shot because Steve chose to pass on the big tom to give me a chance to see what was coming through the woods. I wouldn’t have been upset if he’d taken that turkey. We still have almost a month to hunt. I’d have been happy for him. He lowered the gun, and he let me have mine.

Eastern Wild turkey and Remington 870 Super Mag Bone Collector

My first turkey!

My small turkey weighed 14 pounds, 14 ounces. I’m calling it 15 pounds. I have one permit left. It doesn’t matter if the next turkey is bigger. As long as the population is thinned so they cause less damage to crops, the high tunnels, young fruit trees and gardens, weight is just a number.

Stalking the Wild Turkey?

We were up and out early this morning. We had a specific spot in mind after seeing six jakes in one place and a tom in another last evening. Steve wanted to go for the jakes but after looking at Google Earth, we decided against it because it was too close to homes. We’d have been fine legally but we know what it’s like when idiots people hunt close to our house. Just because you can doesn’t mean you should. We find shotgun shells on the road in front of our house during bird season, but that’s another flip out story.

We set up Ethel, one of our decoys (Lucy and Ricky stayed in the truck because of the distance we had to walk.) and found a place to sit. Steve called. Nothing. Called. nothing. A pileated woodpecker landed in a maple to my right and a little behind us. It whinnied loudly for ten minutes. Sound carried well across the still air. If there were a cluck, yelp or gobble within a mile, we’d have been able to hear it. Nothing. We sat for an hour, then headed home so we could get ready for work.

I spotted a turkey through the trees. “Turkey,” I nearly yelled, followed by “tom!” I jumped out, put one shell in my 870 Remington Super Mag Bone Collector (12 gauge) and was watching the bird 30 seconds after spotting him. Steve used the wet box and on the third call, he stopped and gobbled. I had the shotgun up and safety off, but he didn’t turn to come to the call. At 150 feet away, through the brush, I didn’t have a good shot. Nothing less than a clean kill shot is ever acceptable to me. If I don’t think I can kill my prey with one shot, I’m not shooting.

Steve called to get him to gobble so I could find him again, but he didn’t answer again. I never imagined stalking a turkey. I’ve always been sitting on the ground, decoys out or at least a box call in hand, waiting for them to come to me. Not this morning. This bird kept walking in as much of a straight line as turkeys walk through brush and trees. I pulled my mask out of my pocket and slipped it on (ugliest piece of hunting clothing I own), loaded two more shells and walked up the road to a side road that cuts through the woods. Walk, stop, listen. Walk, stop and listen again. Repeat. I heard him snap twigs and walk through dead leaves and spotted him 200 feet away. I changed my direction but couldn’t get closer. I heard him a second time after he’d gone over a bank and made his way down the ridge but didn’t see him again.

It was fun. I’ve learned a couple of things while turkey hunting. First, I don’t say “never” now. I said I’d never belly crawl through a field to get to a turkey. Ticks, slugs, dew, cold, wet. No thanks. I belly crawled through slugs, dew, cold and wet the next morning, with my shotgun, when I could hear a tom making that odd humming noise they make in their chest cavity (what’s that called?) over a rise but couldn’t see them. This morning I learned you can stalk a wild turkey. I’m kind of proud of myself. If it hadn’t been quite so brushy I’d have come home with a turkey this morning.

Steve’s Turkey

Steve's Jake.

Steve shot a 14.25 pound jake while turkey hunting yesterday morning. He saw a rafter of five turkeys on his way home from a Soil & Water Conservation meeting in Machias on Wednesday. He went back to the field Wednesday night to watch for the birds going up to roost. He found them but they went into the woods before roosting. It was getting dark so he was sure they wouldn’t go far. He left early Thursday morning but was late getting into the field. We try to have our decoys out and be settled into place well before sunrise. Legal hunting time starts 30 minutes before sunrise. That sounds dark to some but it’s light out and easy to see that close to sunrise.

He called when he got to the field. No answer. Being sure they were at least nearby, he set Lucy, the hen decoy (yes, he named them…) up in the field. He scanned the tree line and there they were, all five birds in the early morning fog, 150′ away. He walked back quietly, turned the call on and clucked a few times. They didn’t gobble but they were interested. “Cluck cluck cluck cluck cluck.” They turned toward Lucy and started to walk toward her.

“Cluck cluck GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE GOBBLE.”  All five birds gobbled. We can shoot only males in the spring turkey hunt. He called, they came closer, he called again. One young turkey was eager to meet Lucy. He was first to come in close enough for a good shot and stayed in front of the others all the way to Lucy. One shot and it was over.

I didn’t go with Steve because I had an assignment that took me to the coast at 9:30 am. I needed to leave by 8 am. I should have gone. Steve was back so before 7 am. Figures.

He can say that he’s been turkey hunting this year, not just turkey calling.

Ava, our English Shepherd, loves the turkey. She herded one of the cats away from it, baring a tooth from time to time. As far as she was concerned, this was her turkey. She snuffled and snuzzled it from beak to toe and back again four times. I made her back off once when she decided to lick the bird. No taste testing allowed. She curled up five feet away and kept it safe until Steve cleaned it. There is enough meat on the bird for a large pot of soup from the legs and two meals from the breast meat. The bird is just under a year old and should be good eating.

Ava: I'm gonna love him and hug him and call him George. He's mine, Sebastian. Don't touch!

Eastern Wild Turkeys

A rafter of 12 wild turkeys strolled through this morning. They walk down the road as though they belong there. Opening day of hunting season is April 30. I’ll be dressed in camo, hiding in the bushes with a couple of calls and trying to shoot my first two toms. They’re pests for many of us. They break neighbors’ fruit tree branches (and I’m expanding the orchard this year), get on another neighbor’s roof, fight with my domestic turkeys through the chicken wire of the pen, destroy crops and take dust baths in the loose garden soil. I’m not a fan, but I do love hunting them. If half of the birds are hens and each hen successfully raises only eight poults we’ll have 150ish turkeys in the area. Eight is a conservative number. We see hens with a dozen nearly grown poults each year. We’ve counted hens with 18 poults that are about a quarter of full grown size.

Four toms and a hen.

An eastern wild tom turkey gobbles. Click on this picture, then click on the picture that opens to get to the full sized photo.

Eastern Wild Turkeys

I’m no longer amused. This is the back left corner of the market garden.

I have an option the majority of locals will hate.  Because this is my income and I can show a true profit I have the option of having the release of wild turkeys banned for a 25 mile radius.  I’m not going to ask for that. Instead, I’ll call the warden to get a permit to shoot (and eat) them when they cause crop damage.  Before they went into the woods they walked through the spinach and peas.  They were in a hurry to get away from us so they didn’t stop to eat.

Turkey Hunting

3:08 am Out of bed, make coffee, shower, take an incredible amount of camo clothing to truck.

4:02 am Leave house to meet our friend and guide for the morning, Peter.

4:12 am “Got your license?” Turn around, go home, get license. At least we were only 10 miles away and not 30.

4:45 am Meet up with Peter. He’s been in a field nearby calling for the last 15 minutes. No answer.

Drive to Weston, walk down the side of a huge hill, through the bushes, through two small streams where I sink to my ankles in mud, sit in the cold wind at the edge of the field. Listen as Peter tries several calls. There’s probably a turkey in the distance according to the crows but after 45 minutes it still hasn’t moved or answered Peter. Wait patiently. Pull hood of Steve’s much too big camo coat up over already camouflaged head to get warmer. Give up and move on.

6 am Stop at a store to potty and reluctantly bypass the nice hot coffee I really wanted.

6:20 am some where in Danforth. Walk across a field and through the woods to the edge of another field. Repeat 4:45 am stop.

We were near a deer farm and Peter offered to take me there so I could take photos. I said yes, of course.
An impressive red stag.