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20 Tips On Hunting Public
Land Turkeys
©
By Othmar Vohringer
When the pressure is on it needs skill,
a bit of luck and
these 20 tips to shoot a wily public land gobbler.
1.)
Rain is your Friend
The majority of turkey hunters are, what I call “fair weather
hunters”. They stay home when it rains. Sure turkeys hate
rain
too but they still have to eat and go about their daily business of
ensuring a new generation. Turkeys seem to know about mans habits of
staying home when the weather turns sour and move more and less alert
than usual. This is the time to call less and stalk more. In the rain
your movement is less nosey then at other times. Try to get as close to
the birds as possible and keep your calling friendly. This is not the
time to be aggressive.
2.)
Ambush Toms
When you spot a tom watch which direction he is moving and then try to
intercept him. Some pressured birds will actually move away from any
calling. This is especially the case if your calling
“vocabulary” is in the learning stage. There is no
shame in
walking out of the woods with a turkey hanging over your back that you
have ambushed. Actually ambushing a tom takes more skill then calling
them in.
3.)
Think Positive
If you don’t get a bird the first day don’t think,
I am a
failure, think instead, I want to hear a bird today or tomorrow and see
what he is doing so I know his routine and get him the next day or next
week. Keeping a positive attitude is what keeps you going back day
after day, week after week. A positive attitude also frees your mind
and lets you observe more.
4.) Use
Your Eyes and Ears
Even if a gobbler doesn’t answer you, never assume he is not
close by or lost interest. The biggest mistake many hunters make is to
give up to soon and go to a new spot. Public land birds are extremely
cautious and often come in to calling without uttering a sound. Before
you move to a new location probe your surrounding carefully with your
eyes, using binoculars. Listen carefully for any sound that could
announce the toms approach.
5.)
Move Like a Predator
Don’t trample though the woods like an elephant. When you
head to
your spot stop often, listen, look and call. Then wait a few minutes
before you move on. Be stealthy like a tiger when you move on. If you
run to the woods from one spot to the next chances are you will be
caught flat-footed by a turkey or just as bad spook a deer that then in
turn alerts the turkeys to your presence.
6.) Get
in Early, Stay Late
Wherever possible find pockets with fewer hunters. Then be there early
and stay until the last minute of legal hunting time. Many toms are
killed because the hunter put in that little bit extra time when
everybody else went back to camp. Most hunters leave the woods earlier
than they have to and it is then that time when turkeys start to move
more.
7.)
Always Have a Backup Plan
Nowhere is it more important to have a plan “B”
than on
public land. Never fall in the trap of thinking that the “hot
spot” you found is your secret. If you do you will quickly
learn
on opening day that your “hot spot” is five other
hunters
“hot spot. You need always an alternate place to go. Good
scouting habits will give that option.
8.) Be
Prepared to Walk The Distance
It is very tempting to sit down on the first promising location as
close to the vehicle as possible, but most other hunters have that same
mentality. It is not uncommon on heavy hunted public land so see
hunters sitting within eyesight of each other. Walk further where other
hunters don’t go early in the morning before legal shooting
light
and then work your way back after the other hunters have packed up and
gone home.
9.)
Hunt When Others Don’t
Turkeys are keenly aware what is going on around them, they know at
what times and days hunters invade the woods. Turkeys have learned that
weekends are the most dangerous times for them to be out and about. Try
to get a day off work during a normal weekday, like Wednesday or
Thursday. You will find that you have the woods to yourself and turkeys
are less paranoid. It is very likely that you can kill a turkey during
a regular weekday where it is impossible to kill one on the weekend.
10.)
Use Other Hunters to Your Advantage
If you see or get a feeling that most of the hunters are in the same
area as you, then the turkeys do too. Go to the opposite area of where
the majority of the hunters are, the turkeys do too. Make sure you
cover your tracks so other hunters will not follow you. On public land
it is always advisable to figure out what the other hunters do as much
as figuring out what the turkeys do and then do something or go
somewhere different.
11.)
Hunt the Thick Stuff
every turkey hunter loves to sit on a woodland edge overlooking a
lovely green field. It’s tempting to sit down and stake a few
decoys out in the middle of a field with a great few off in the
distance and watch a big tom working his way in. Because it so tempting
you can bet your bottom dollar that every hunter in the area does
exactly that. But consider this. A big 3 to 4 year old tom
didn’t
get to that age by running across open fields to every decoy or call.
The young and stupid birds to that and they will not make it into their
second year of life.
Set up in good thick cover the toms use to approach open fields, you
just increased your chances of killing a mature boss gobbler
dramatically, because no other hunter will do that.
12.) Be
Aggressive
On private land you have the luxury of hunting conservatively. Then
getting more aggressive as the season goes on. On public land you do
not have that privilege. Here it’s the rule of the jungle,
first
to come first to take. During the first few days of the season call
aggressively, try to outcall every other hunter, while covering as much
ground as possible to strike up a gobbler. When you this remember the
tips above about moving around.
13.)
Slow Down After the Initial
Aggressiveness
After a few days of giving the gobblers an earful of your calling they
can become wary. Now is the time to be more conservative with your
movements and calls. Loud repetitive yelping and cutting can drive any
spooky tom away. Try soft enticing “love talk”,
short
series of hen yelps, content clucks and putts of feeding hens, to add
to the romance include a few heart melting purrs.
14.) If
You Hear Gobbling Ones Get Up And
Move
Many turkey hunters adhere to some sort of ritual like it is a law or
something. When they hear a tom gobble they call again and wait for the
second gobble. If you hear a gobble and are reasonably sure what
direction it is coming from and that there are no hunters in the same
area, get up and close the distance between you and the tom. The closer
you can get the more likely the tom will come in and not change his
mind half way in.
15.)
Try a Different Locator Call
Again be different than other hunters. If the majority of hunters use a
crow call use something different, like an owl hooter, pileated
woodpecker. Personally I have never been a great fan of using coyote
howls. Coyote have turkeys on their dinner menu. Enough said. However,
I have been known to use an air horn and it worked like a charm.
16.)
Find Out Where Not to Go
This is almost as important on public land as to find out where to go.
If a flock of turkeys are roosted in a big old tree in plain sight of
the highway or within other easy access, then you can be rest assured
that every hunter seeing that will be “roosted”
near that
tree too. Joining them will make no sense at all. Instead, circle
around behind the tree where access is not so easy and scout there for
turkey sign and then set up. With that many hunters near the roosting
tree it is very likely that the turkeys come of the roost and walk
right up to you because they do not expect a hunter in that hard to
access area.
17.)
Hunt at Odd Times
The best times to hunt turkeys is when they are most active, which is
from dawn to about 10:30am. After that most hens head to their nests.
Most hunters consider this the toughest to kill a tom and go home. Boy,
are they making a mistake. The early noon hours and where permitted the
afternoon can be the best time to kill a gobbler. After most of the
hens are nesting toms are busy looking for the remaining hens. This can
be your ticket to score big.
18.)
Use a Boat
If you have a boat use it to drift silently along a river and call. If
you get a response park the boat and get him. If you miss continue down
river with the boat. River bottoms make great turkey habitat, but is
often difficult to access for hunters due to being plain visible to the
resident turkeys. Turkeys never expect “danger”
coming form
the waterway and that makes them vulnerable to a silent hunter in a
boat.
19.) Be
Different
Instead of hunting the same piece of real estate with easy access,
change and hunt the most unlikely spots where no other hunters go. You
have nothing to loose only to win.
20.) Do
Not Overcall
There is a fine line of calling to little and too much. You can pique a
tom’s curiosity by calling sparingly and you can put him of
by
being a “chatter box”. Listen to the mood of the
turkeys
and how much they talk and then imitate that mood. Most hunters,
especially on public land, call too much. Most hunters never kill a
bird on public land. Strive to be different then anybody else and you
will succeed where others don’t. As I said earlier, big old
toms
are perfectly aware of the habits of hunters, being different will fool
them.

I welcome
assignments
from hunting
related media. Send for queries and
requests by email.
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