• Help Support TNDeer:

Go to call

A pot call that I made....walnut pot, slate over glass, hickory and purpleheart strikers. This year I am also going to try a beautiful wingbone call that my buddy 'Fairchaser' gave to me a couple of years ago....working to learn to make turkey sounds on it now...
 

Attachments

  • IMG_1910.webp
    IMG_1910.webp
    124.6 KB · Views: 1
  • IMG_1909.webp
    IMG_1909.webp
    97.8 KB · Views: 1
Nothing fancy, just my old Primos power crystal.
As I have gotten more experienced over the years I use mouth calls more and more, but I have been carrying this call for 25 years and I still use it many times a season. It has been responsible for more dead birds than I can count. I bet it didn't cost me $20 bucks. If I ever lose or break this call, I will go into a deep state of depression.
 
As I have gotten more experienced over the years I use mouth calls more and more, but I have been carrying this call for 25 years and I still use it many times a season. It has been responsible for more dead birds than I can count. I bet it didn't cost me $20 bucks. If I ever lose or break this call, I will go into a deep state of depression.
They are still available.
 
Dave Owens Blue Ghost mouth call. I use the Grey Ghost also, but mainly the Blue.
The more I use my wing bone the more I use my wing bone.
I use a Primos Purple Haze glass call when trying to locate as well.
I have other calls that I carry and mess around with just for the enjoyment of it, but the above listed calls are what I kill turkeys with.
 
Believe it or not, when I need to yank a gobble out of a bird just to make me feel better or have been whooped by one for a couple days, I pull out a Lynch World Champion box call. It's the first turkey call ever owned and is probably 35 years old. Don't know if it is the tone/sound of the call or my confidence in it…or something else but it works and I never leave for the turkey woods without it.
 
I'm not brand specific, but mouth calls are my go to. Probably use them 60% of the time. The other 40% is split between an old Knight and Hale box, a couple of slates, and a couple of wingbone yelpers.
 
Primos Aluma-Slate and an H.S. Strut split V 3 reed. Been a killer combo for me for a lot of years. Dad had an aluma-slate that I learned how to hunt with so I bought one for myself when I was 17 or 18.
 

Latest posts

Back
Top