BRITTMAN
Well-known member
I have killed a couple of birds minutes ... in one case 10 seconds after they hit the ground flying down from the roost. I have watched Toms strut and gobble from limbs that I thought no way could that limb hold a 24-pound bird. The time I shot the Tom 10 seconds after fly down, I never called once. Sat against a tree ... Tom flew down opposite of the hens ... landed 10 feet from my lap. I had to let him scoot out about 15-20 yards before I dropped him.
I have also spent many a morning listening to hens and gobblers talk in the trees a bit. Then watching a hen or two or three fly down 15 - 100 seconds or so before that gobbler. Running about like their head is cut off, but far enough from me that it was likely over. 90% of the time that Tom flies down to that hen(s).
Adrenaline rush of that morning sit when near a treed gobbler is great, but too often now I wait until that 8 - 2 time slot. Easier on the brain, easier if trying to work some too, easier in the sense you do not have to be out there to roost them the night before either.
I have also spent many a morning listening to hens and gobblers talk in the trees a bit. Then watching a hen or two or three fly down 15 - 100 seconds or so before that gobbler. Running about like their head is cut off, but far enough from me that it was likely over. 90% of the time that Tom flies down to that hen(s).
Adrenaline rush of that morning sit when near a treed gobbler is great, but too often now I wait until that 8 - 2 time slot. Easier on the brain, easier if trying to work some too, easier in the sense you do not have to be out there to roost them the night before either.
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