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Mentored Turkey Hunt Yields Unforgettable Results

Mentored hunts successful

Adam Arnold, left, and Charles Barrow with their mentored hunt turkeys

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

The fate of a turkey hunt鈥檚 outcome is indeed fickle. High-fives can be the celebratory conclusion just as easily as the dejected hunter鈥檚 incessant second-guessing of the tactics that caused the gobbler to walk away instead of strutting into range.

Chuck Sykes, 黑料天堂 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries (WFF) Director, has been in both situations. Sometimes that fate varies daily. Sometimes it鈥檚 different segments of the season, and sometimes, it鈥檚 different years.

With a little less than a month left in the season for most parts of the state, Sykes said hunters have had mixed results.

鈥淪ome hunters are doing well; some are not,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淚t depends on where you are in the state. Personally, I think the turkeys are a little behind for this time of the season as compared to previous seasons. Gobbling has been very poor for me. I鈥檝e hunted quite a few days, and I鈥檝e seen five turkeys die, so don鈥檛 be crying for me.

鈥淚t鈥檚 substandard for me compared to what it was last year, which gives me great hope that the end of the season is going to be really good. I just think that cold snap slowed things down a little bit. I know we had some cold weather last year, but there鈥檚 something just a little bit different this year.鈥

Sykes said last year鈥檚 opening few days started with lows in the 30s, but the turkeys were still 鈥済obbling their brains out.鈥

鈥淲e even had a couple of mornings in the upper 20s, but we were killing turkeys,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey were working right. This year, turkeys are gobbling two or three times, hitting the ground, and it鈥檚 over with.鈥

Sykes said it appears the 2017 and 2018 seasons will be flipped in terms of turkey activity and hunting success.

鈥淭he first few weeks of the season last year couldn鈥檛 have been any better for me,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he last two or three weeks of the season couldn鈥檛 have been any worse.

鈥淚鈥檓 anticipating, based on past experience, that during the last few weeks of the season, the gobbling should be better and turkeys should be working better. I think we鈥檙e going to have a good closing few weeks of the season.鈥

Although the overall season has been a disappointment for Sykes, one magical afternoon will be forever etched in his memory, and he wasn鈥檛 the one who pulled the trigger.

That hunt occurred on one of the WFF鈥檚 Special Opportunity Areas (SOAs) during an Adult Mentored Hunting Program outing.

Sykes recruited his old hunting buddy Al Mattox to help guide during the hunt on the new Pine Barren SOA area. Charles Barrow of Ozark and Adam Arnold of Pelham were the lucky hunters who were randomly drawn for the hunt.

鈥淐harles actually participated in one of the mentored deer hunts,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淗e was lucky enough to get selected for the turkey hunt.鈥

Arnold, on the other hand, has been an avid shooter for years, including long-distance shooting and sporting clays, but had really never hunted.

鈥淎dam is one of those guys who has been participating in the Pittman-Robertson Act program by buying guns and ammunition, but he hasn鈥檛 been buying a hunting license for us to be able to capture that money and bring it back to 黑料天堂,鈥 Sykes said of the excise tax levied on firearms, ammunition and hunting equipment. 鈥淪o, this was a unique experience.

鈥淗is family didn鈥檛 hunt. I think he may have been dove hunting once or twice throughout his life, and that was it. His family and group of friends weren鈥檛 exposed to hunting, but he was introduced to shooting later in life.鈥

Sykes said Arnold is a very accomplished shot who has his own shotgun and extensive knowledge of firearms overall.

鈥淭he gun part of it was easy,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淭he hunting portion, we had to do a lot of teaching. The way we handled it, my best hunting buddy, Al Mattox, was with me. Al got back from Afghanistan three weeks before the hunt and wanted to help. He had been serving a tour in Afghanistan for about nine or 10 months. Al and I have hunted together a long time.鈥

Sykes and Mattox came up with a plan to hunt as a four-man team with a primary shooter and a backup shooter.

鈥淭hat way, during the heat of the action, whoever was with the secondary shooter could give them a play-by-play of what was going on, taking the pressure off of them,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淭hey weren鈥檛 worried about shooting. They were worried about learning. I could walk them through everything. I could explain what Al was doing with the primary shooter. Al could explain what I was doing with the backup shooter.鈥

The hunters were situated just off the edge of a food plot

What Sykes and Mattox didn鈥檛 anticipate was that by the end of the hunt there was a spent shell lying on the ground next to each hunter.

鈥淚t worked out really well,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淚t just so happened, when everything came together, there were two mature birds and both were able to harvest their first birds.

鈥淚t was a once in a lifetime experience for those guys as well and Al and I as the mentors. It was a very emotional afternoon.鈥

Sykes said the unsuccessful morning hunt got the hunters prepared for the eventful afternoon session.

鈥淚t all worked out for the best,鈥 he said. 鈥淒uring the morning hunt there was no gobbling, nothing. So, we got to teach them how to be still. We got to teach them how to pick a location when turkeys aren鈥檛 gobbling; how to look for tracks; how to look for sign. We taught them a bunch of the basics that morning.

鈥淩ight after lunch we went out, and on our first setup, I called in an extremely vocal hen. They were introduced to a live turkey at close range. They could use what we taught them that morning on camouflage and how to be still, when to move and when not to move.鈥

Mattox had done some scouting a few days before the hunt and found some gobblers in one area. Still, the hunters were on unfamiliar ground because WFF had just recently closed the purchase on the Pine Barren tract. Sykes and Mattox used aerial maps on their smartphones to survey for likely turkey hangouts.

鈥淲e actually found a hidden food plot and set up off the edge of it,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淎dam was the primary shooter. I was with Charles off to the side. We placed two hen decoys out in the field. I yelped on a box, and a turkey gobbled about 400 yards from us, kind of behind us. About 15 second later, I looked and saw two other gobblers in the hardwoods coming to us.

鈥淎dam did really well. Al was talking him through everything. Charles and I were sitting back as spectators at that point. Adam and Al let the turkeys strut all the way by them, about 75 yards across the field at a distance of about 15 yards from the hunter.鈥

Al waited to give Adam the sign to shoot so that the turkeys would be in position for Charles to get a shot if the second turkey happened to hang around for a few seconds.

鈥淲hen the turkeys got into a position where I knew Adam was ready, I called to them,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淭he dominant bird gobbled. I was letting Adam and Al know it was time.鈥

Arnold fired and dropped his bird. Sykes then coached Barrow through the backup-shooter process.

鈥淲hen turkeys are at 15 yards and there is a big boom, they don鈥檛 know where it came from,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淭he turkey was walking in circles. I was cutting to him. The turkey didn鈥檛 know what to do. By the time the gobbler got his bearings, Charles was ready and made a good shot.

鈥淚t was an incredible hunt.鈥

Sykes fully expects similar scenarios to unfold on the Pine Barren SOA in Dallas County.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the most exciting piece of property I鈥檝e been on that is public hunting,鈥 Sykes said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 part of the old Hit and Miss Lodge where Mossy Oak did a lot of their filming. The amount of game there is incredible.鈥

For those who haven鈥檛 had much luck this turkey season, Sykes said it鈥檚 time to regroup but never surrender.

鈥淵ou鈥檝e just got to keep going,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s my grandmother always told me, a bad beginning means it鈥檚 going to be a good ending, and I鈥檓 counting on it.鈥

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Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries' Justin Gilchrist and Jeff Makemson, right, fry up fresh turkey nuggets