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Field Turkeys Require Special Tactics, Patience

feathers

The sunlight makes the Eastern wild turkey feathers shine with iridescent qualities. Photo by David Rainer

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

One of the most frustrating aspects of pursuing the Eastern wild turkey in 黑料天堂 is hunting the wily birds in wide open territory, open agricultural fields or clearcuts for example.

With virtually no cover to hide, hunters may have to resort to somewhat extreme measures to bag a bird in the open. I remember trying to outwit what I call field turkeys with Preston Pittman, who has won so many turkey calling contests that I can鈥檛 list them all. Pittman finally said, 鈥淚f I have to dig a hole in the middle of the field and get there at midnight, I鈥檓 going to figure out a way to kill this turkey.鈥

Late last season, I headed to Choctaw County to hunt a field turkey with Larry Norton, a two-time World Champion caller. The bird he had located was using a clearcut that had been cleared in recent years, which meant no real cover existed. Still, it was the only gobbling bird we found.

鈥淚 used to hate hunting field turkeys until I figured out how to do it,鈥 said Norton, a longtime turkey guide at Bent Creek Lodge near Jachin. 鈥淲hen I first started hunting turkeys in a field, like most young hunters, I would be too impatient. Turkeys come to a field to feed. They might be strutting, but the main reason they come to a field is to feed.鈥

Norton said after calling to the gobblers for about 30 minutes, he would get frustrated and move to the other corner of the field, which could take another 30 minutes to keep from spooking the turkeys.

鈥淚鈥檇 finally get to the other end of the field and look up, and the turkeys would be 20 yards from where I鈥檇 been sitting,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t happened several times until it finally dawned on me one day that I needed to start paying attention to what they鈥檙e doing in the field.

鈥淲hat he鈥檚 doing is trying to fill his craw (crop) up, especially in the afternoon when he鈥檚 getting ready to fly up. He might be pecking around eating grass and seeds when a grasshopper takes off to the side. He goes to grab the grasshopper, and now he鈥檚 headed in the opposite direction. He鈥檒l start pecking again and pick his head up to listen for the hen. Then he鈥檒l turn back and start feeding in your direction. If he鈥檚 out there and fills his craw up, he鈥檒l pick his head up and listen. Then he鈥檒l head straight to you. Just about every turkey I鈥檝e killed like that, his craw was filled slam full of stuff.鈥

If he gets on a gobbler later in the afternoon and doesn鈥檛 have time to get properly set up to hunt the turkey, Norton uses a different tactic.

鈥淚 try to remember where a turkey was gobbling around that field that morning,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hen I鈥檒l back off 100 yards from the field. He鈥檒l want to come to a hen that鈥檚 calling because his other hens are not being receptive. I remember hunting a turkey with Tom Fegely (the late outdoor writer) on a power line that had 15 hens with him. I was afraid if we got too close, it might intimidate the hens and they would leave, taking him with them. We backed off 100 yards from the power line, and I told Tom that he might come in quiet, or he might be drumming. Twenty minutes before fly-up time, I heard him drumming. He was easing our way pretty swiftly. Tom shot him at 20 yards.鈥

Norton also said field turkeys require specific calling techniques as well.

鈥淚f he鈥檚 got hens with him, do feeding calls, shy hen yelps, clucking and purring and scratching in the leaves,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 want to intimidate the hens.鈥

Norton remembered a hunt where a gobbler was all 鈥榟enned up鈥 with about 25 hens around him when the shy calling helped his hunter bag what became known as the 鈥渨hite lizard鈥 turkey, one of Norton鈥檚 favorite hunts while he was guiding. Norton was standing beside a pine tree looking at turkeys in a 2 陆-acre field that had a significant slope with windrows.

鈥淚 was clucking and purring, and the hens started coming toward us,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he hens got close, and I knew the gobbler had to be right there somewhere, but I couldn鈥檛 see him. There was a log laying in the edge of the field, and I saw what looked like a white lizard coming down that log. I thought to myself that I鈥檇 never seen a white lizard, and then the gobbler walked out from behind the log. It was the top of his head I was seeing coming down that log.

鈥淪am (the hunter) was on his knees, and he got his gun up. After a few minutes, I could see the barrel start dipping down. I eased my right hand out and caught the barrel and held it up until the hens cleared away from the gobbler. I told him that when I turn the barrel loose you shoot. He came to Bent Creek 10 years later, and all he talked about was that white lizard.鈥

Another memorable field gobbler that Norton hunted numerous times was nicknamed the 鈥済litter turkey鈥 for a specific reason.

鈥淭hat turkey was like a bird dog trained on a collar,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 pretty sure I called him up in this little hollow. He was shot but got away. I thought he would probably die, but he didn鈥檛. I heard him gobbling after that and went to him. I yelped and he shut up. I went back to the truck and crowed a couple of times, and he gobbled. I went back down and yelped. Nothing.鈥

Later in the season, Norton and a buddy happened to ease up to a field, and the gobbler was out there by himself.

鈥淢y buddy said, 鈥楲et鈥檚 see you put some of the World Champion calling on this turkey and get this over with quick,鈥欌 Norton said. 鈥淚 yelped one time, and that turkey came out of a strut and ran the other way.

鈥淭he next time I see him again in that field, I yelped real softly, and he took off running again.鈥

Hunting turkeys in wide open spaces takes concealment and plenty of patience. Photo by Larry Norton

During the last week of the season, Norton recruited another buddy to try to figure out how to bag this bird, but he told his hunting partner to leave his yelpers at home. Another complication was the gobbler had roosted in a tree about 200 yards into an 8-year-old clearcut that was basically impenetrable.

鈥淭he turkey gobbled and gobbled and gobbled,鈥 Norton said. 鈥淎t 9 o鈥檆lock, my buddy said if I didn鈥檛 yelp at that turkey he was going to leave. So, I tried to yelp so low that he couldn鈥檛 hear me just to satisfy my buddy. Well, that turkey heard me and flew out of that tree to some big woods on the other side of the clearcut. My buddy looked at me and said, 鈥榃hat in the world have you done to that turkey?鈥欌

Not far away was a field with strips of chufa planted. The hunters moved to the edge of the field and spotted hens and jakes feeding. About 30 minutes after getting set up, Norton spotted the infamous gobbler coming into the field.

鈥淥ne of the hens saw him and clucked and yelped,鈥 Norton said. 鈥淗e turned around and ran away from his own hen. My buddy said there鈥檚 something bad wrong with that turkey. I told him to sit still, he鈥檇 be back.鈥

Sure enough, the gobbler came back 30 minutes later. One of his hens yelped, and he turned tail and ran toward a road on the end of the field. Norton backed away from the field and high-tailed it toward that road to try to cut him off.

鈥淚 eased up to the road and didn鈥檛 see anything,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hen I saw some bushes between me and the end of field wiggling a little bit. He stepped out in the road and looked into the field at his hens. I put the red dot on him. When he looked around, I shot him.鈥

What Norton found when he started field dressing the turkey explained all the gobbler鈥檚 unusual behavior and his 鈥済litter turkey鈥 nickname.

鈥淗e basically didn鈥檛 have a breast on his left side,鈥 he said. 鈥淗e had nine No. 4s in his back. His right leg had been broken, and his feet glittered with copper-plated No. 6s. He about ran me crazy.鈥

Our first encounter with the gobbler we hunted in late April ended when he followed one of his hens across the clearcut in the only spot where I couldn鈥檛 get a shot out of the blind.

We tried again the following week with only three days left in the season, and this time, his hen had abandoned him to tend to her nest.

鈥淲hen he first started gobbling, he was at least a half-mile away,鈥 Norton said. 鈥淗e took his time. He probably had a hen or two to deal with. Once they left him, he headed our way.鈥

Within a few minutes, the gobbler circled around to the left of the blind, but this time, he chose the wrong side. I was able to slip the gun through the side window. I put the bead on his neck at 30 yards and pulled the trigger. He went down in a heap.

鈥淥nce his hens leave him, he鈥檚 like a buck in rut,鈥 Norton said. 鈥淭hey only have a certain time to do their thing, and sometimes you can catch them where if you yelp one time, they鈥檒l come running.鈥

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Two-Time World Champion turkey caller Larry Norton of Myrtlewood cleans the turkey, including the thighs. Photo by David Rainer