Archive for May, 2008

Turkey Season comes to an end!

Somewhere someone has got to get the end of turkey season coordinated with other world shattering events: like Mother’s day and Pentecost. This year, the last day of turkey season coincided with one of Hallmark’s favorite money makers and the birth of the Christian church. Who in their right mind other than the motherless would have the guts to go turkey hunting on Mother’s day and also not go to church? With this in mind and also a teenager with bronchitis/pneumonia, I was limited to a couple of afternoon turkey hunts when I could slip away ffrom work. What occurred were two of the more eventful hunts of my life:
Thursday afternoon: Back to Chuck Bean’s TrophyBassLake farm. Having only the afternoon, I decided to set up on a planted powerline that I knew was a feeding site and also strutting zone for Chuck’s turkeys. This late in the season when birds can be a little call shy and gobbling is at a minimum, I elected to just sit quitely, throw out an occasional yelp, and beat the ground with my turkey wing. My Ameristeps Chairblind is perfect for this type of hunting. Sitting in a nice camp chair in the shade beats being on the ground anytime! About an hour into my hunt/sit, I was checking e-mail when I looked down the power line and saw a hen approaching. I slowly brought my binoculars up to take a closer look and noticed she had a pretty long beard for a hen. I also noticed something shiny on her leg which turned out to be a band . Normally I would not shoot a bearded hen(they are legal in Tennessee) but the chance to take a banded bird sealed the deal. At 27 yards, My Primos Jellyhead choke and Hevi-Shot #4’s folded the big hen. When I got to her, I measured her beard at 7 inches. More importantly was the Dixie Chapter of the NWTF band with the #389 and the date 3/10/01. If this turkey was captured as a juvenile, this made her age about 8 years old – an Old hen!. What an unusual trophy!

Friday afternoon: Thursday worked so well that fellow Turkey Guy, Bradley “Bad Boy Buggie” Dickens and I tried to do it again. We had just arrived at the farm and were working our way down a farm road that parallels the power line. Brad is a great with a diaphragm and he was yelping and cutting as we cruised down the road. As we neared its end and started to make a right turn toward the power line, his yelping was answered by multiple gobbles from multiple gobblers and they were on the power line and they were close! Brad and I quickly tucked ourselves in the shade of a large tree and began to call. It was quickly apparent that these gobblers would answer just about anything we threw at them: cutts, purrs, yelps, scratching, wing beats,…. I bet they would have even gobbled at a Boy George album… but they were not leaving that power line. Brad whispered, “Do you think we can move closer?” From knowing the lay of the land, I knew we were toast unless those turkeys moved down the power line about 50 yards. I whispered back to Brad, “Lets be quiet for a minute and see what they do.” After a few minutes, Brad threw out a couple of yelps. The gobbles returned but from about 75 yards from where they were before. We were in business! We quietly creeped down the road until we were about 20 yards from the power line, Through the undergrowth and foliage, we could see the turkeys moving away from us. Brad quickly jumped all over them with a rapid series of cuts and they quickly did a 180 degree turned and headed back at us. We barely had time to slowly sink to the ground on the side of the road. Sitting side by side, we noticed an opening in the foliage that the toms would have to walk through. Brad whispered, “We’ll shoot when we’ve got 2 heads up. Slowly the Toms worked their way back toward us gobbling as they came. One passed by the opening and than 2 heads appeared. We whispered, “One, two, three, BOOM!” Jelly Headed Hevi-Shot did the job and the 2 birds were flopping. Getting a double with one of your favorite hunting buddies is hard to beat but what we discovered next was even better. My bird had a green tag attached to each wing with the #3 on it! Chuck Bean had seen these birds several times and had photographed them. There was also another tom in the group with a green #6.

Two hunts and 2 birds with bands/tags! I stopped by the Dickson Sportsman Store to check the birds in as they are a local TWRA big game check in station. The Sportsman Store is a great place for turkey gear and one of their knowledgable employees, T.J. Rayburn, knew the scoop on the bands and tags. The local chapter of the National Wild Turkey Federation was responsible for the hen’s band. The local TWRA officer, Mitch Bailey, had been running a gobbler tagging program for a number of years. Mitch is also known as the founder of Buckthorn Camo; an up and coming camo pattern. The green tag let us know that the bird was 3 years old(tagged as a jake) and the #3 was his indentifier. I’ll try to do a future blog on Mitch and his program. After relaying the bird’s measurements to T.J, it was off to Nashville and the end of another turkey season.

Well, 4 states and 4 birds later, it has been quite a ride. We’ll continue to post blog articles from hunts in our northern states but I’m done. I also do an article about end of year storage so all of your gear will be in great shape for next year.

Keys to the hunt:

1. Chairblinds are great for afternoon hunts where waiting over food plots, travel lanes, and strutting zones can take hours. Bring a book.
2. I am really impressed with the performance of my Primos Jellyhead choke combined with #4 Hevi-Shot. Every Tom I harvested this year was taken from 25 to 35 yards and they were hammered.
3. Cutting yelps and purrs can really turn a Tom’s head in a hurry if you know what you’re doing.
4. Again, scouting was the key to our taking those Toms. By knowing where they had to move before we moved, we were able to close the distance and seal the deal.

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Buffalo Springs Outfitters

Last week, I paid a visit to Buffalo Springs Outfitters in Gallatin Missouri to chase big Missouri Toms and do an inspection report for Outdoor Connection. Judd Whitefield has a great operation at Buffalo Springs and while I did not get a turkey, I do have one of the better equipment failure stories of all time:

I was met by owner, Judd Whitefield, at the Kansas City International Airport for the 90 minute ride out to Buffalo Spings. We made a quick stop at Walmart on the way to pick up my Missouri over the counter non-resident turkey permit. The next morning, I was met at 4:30 by head guide, Bob Peetom. He told me he expected a quick hunt as he had roosted a big tom the evening before. We snuck thru a pasture and set up about 100 yards aways from a hillside overlooking the creek where Bob expected the big boy was snoozing. As the morning was turning light gray and the birds were singing, one tree yelp from Bob elicited not a gobble but a roar from the bird. He quickly flew down and marched into our decoy set where he was determined to beat up our gobbler decoy. He had a paint brush for a bear, big spurs and was standing about 17 yards away. I slowly sighted down the barrel of my gun and was just about to pull the trigger when the lens of my glasses fell out! I went from “focused” to “blind” just like that. I whispered to Bob: “I can’t see him!”. He whispered back: “What the heck you mean you can’t see him? He’s right there!” With that, the tom did his Roadrunner imitation and was gone. Bob turned to me wide eyed and with a question mark in his eyes. I slowly put my finger through the opening in my glasse’s frame and he understood. We both burst out laughing. This trip proved that you don’t have to kill a turkey to have a good time. Over 3 days, Bob and I roosted, yelped, cackled, fighting purred, and gobbled at multiple Toms over the leases that Buffalo Springs controls. I had several opportunities to take a Jake or a smaller Tom but that is not what I was looking for. I never got the big one but I had a great time. This place has got turkeys and some big ones. I saw several Toms weighing in excess over 25 lbs. and one pushing 30. Their lodge is small but immaculate and the food wasl outstanding. Judd has a real eye for detail and wants you to be as comfortable as possible. I’ll definitely be back!

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The Maine Boys Strike for the 1st time!

One of the things I wanted to do this year was get some hunts from other parts of the country. Here is a blog from my good buddy and fellow OC franchise owner Joshua Slingerland from Maine. Joshua and friend Tim Pepper recently invested in the future of hunting by helping Tim’s nephew, Josh Fournier, get a bird:

The plan was for my friend Tim Pepper and I to take his 14 year old nephew Josh Fournier hunting. We had glassed the birds the night before, seen witch trail they entered the woods on to roost and made a plan to set up nearby at first light the next day. 3am found us all to soon getting ready to go, with a ton of gear to haul and set up, we were in the field and setting up by 4am and set up by 4:30am. I truly believe the best way to be successful in the field with youth hunters is to use a ground blind, thats how we hid two grown men and big 14 year old plus two video cameras on tripods. Everyone had their own chair and we were very comfortable. The first bird gobbled from the roost behind us at 5am, our excitement went through the roof because he was only 40 yards away. Then 2 more birds gobbled in side 50 yards! 5:19 a jake landed 15 yards from the blind and went straight for the pretty boy decoy set. Not long after two more jakes came by the blind(you guessed it, on the exact trail they used the night before) inside 20 yards. With 3 jakes spitting and drumming at the decoys and two more birds gobbling at my calling, it was awesome. One of the jakes mounted the hen decoy and stomped it for 20 minutes. During that time a tom had been answering the calls and steadily getting closer, he entered the field behind us a hundred yards away full fan. When he seen the jake attempting to breed the decoy he started running right at us, having a big longbeard cover 90 yards in about ten seconds had Josh pretty excited. I cut sharply on the call, stopping the strutter at 20 yards and the gun went off. The bird spun around and stopped and the gun went off again, this time he went straight down and never moved again. To say it was a good day is an under statement, when we checked the bird in it weighed 19.8lbs,1inch spurs and an 8 inch beard. We also took Josh hunting on youth day last year and he shot an 18lb long beard, in total he has hunted turkeys exactly twice and killed two great birds. Now he’s hooked for life. Opening day for Tim and I is Monday April 28 I will keep everyone posted.

Gear list:

Double bull matrix 360 blind

Pretty boy and girl decoys w/real fan

Mossberg 835 tactical w/ red dot scope

Winchester Supreme 3in.#5 turkey loads

Primos diaphragm calls

In the outdoors,

-Joshua Slingerland-

Owner/AgentOutdoor Connection

(518)339-5199

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