seems all the people on here want to cluck and wait the bird out.Im sure that works but i like to hear the gobble.i call loud and often.I still do pretty good and its more fun to me that way.Who else hunts that way?
REN said:aggressive calling works GREAT for 2 year old birds without a doubt. They will be the ones to commit more often then not with that style of calling. Nothing wrong with killing 2 years olds by any means and personally I like to shoot them in the face but more often then not that is the birds that really works for.
RAFI said:well when the spurs are 1 1/4 the bird is old enough lol love calling them in but when the spurs are 3/4 it takes away some of the hunt but it still fun
Grizzly Johnson said:RAFI said:well when the spurs are 1 1/4 the bird is old enough lol love calling them in but when the spurs are 3/4 it takes away some of the hunt but it still fun
What if that bird had 1.25" spurs the year before and broke them off to 3/4" nubs this spring?
:grin:
RAFI said:Grizzly Johnson said:RAFI said:well when the spurs are 1 1/4 the bird is old enough lol love calling them in but when the spurs are 3/4 it takes away some of the hunt but it still fun
What if that bird had 1.25" spurs the year before and broke them off to 3/4" nubs this spring?
:grin:
hes still on the grill but im not happy
Setterman said:To each their own, and whatever works best for you is how I look at this.
I used to call super loud and super aggressively. However, I found over time I had much more success by playing it coy, and being patient. The main thing that really shifted the odds in my favor was becoming a tactician at getting ultra close before making the first peep to a bird. When I say close, I mean pushing the envelope on getting busted or being in the perfect position.
When you get close, sparingly calling is deadly.
The loud stuff works great on 2 year old birds, or birds that are alone and lonely. It can have serious issues with birds that are super henned up, as the hens just march away.
A good rule of thumb is, if the hens are vocal and loud, then be loud. If the hens are silent or very soft, then follow suit. Works pretty well IMO.