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TurkeyArchived Posts from this Category It just keeps happening for Brady in NEPosted by Wes on 25 Apr 2007 | Tagged as: Turkey
Saturday starts with at the farm we ended at on Friday night. We set up in virtually the same area as the night before. Again Gobblers surrounded us and they flew down in the other direction. This brings us to the afternoon. We set up in a meadow where a nice Jake quickly meets his maker. We move to a meadow that I’ve watched Tom’s strut in later in the afternoon. 2 Tom’s and 2 Jake’s start making their way across the field. As they feed across the field in a zigzag motion the anticipation rises. At 30 yards Eric raises and takes a nice Tom. We’re celebrating his accomplishment and setting back up incase more birds are on their way when we hear a shot about 200 yards behind us. I have to admit I was a little freaked out as I thought someone was trespassing on our lease. Come to find out one of the guys had moved without me knowing and smacked a nice Tom too. The sun set and we were heading back to the truck with 3 birds for the day. At 9:30pm the rain started and continued through the night. The boys were discouraged to say the least that the rain was still in full swing at 5:30am. We arrived at a different farm and drank coffee until 6:00am when they decided to call day 3 of the hunt a bust. We headed for the hotel and at 9:00am they headed back to Denver. The lesson here is don’t count your (bearded) chickens before they hatch because at noon the weather broke and sun and birds came out but, the guys were well into Colorado by that time. Until next week, have a safe hunt and may the Tom of your lifetime gobble his way into your lap. Brady
Comments Off They have turkeys in New YorkPosted by Wes on 23 Apr 2007 | Tagged as: Turkey
This was by far the best hunting experience for Mike and me. If any of you have a chance to take a kid hunting, do it. You won’t regret it.
Comments Off When to use a rear naked choke while turkey huntingPosted by Wes on 20 Apr 2007 | Tagged as: Turkey
Travis and I hunted “West Park” the morning of April 6. We heard two Comments Off Marty and JakePosted by Wes on 19 Apr 2007 | Tagged as: Turkey Good Hunting,
Marty
Comments Off Brady and Gang Shoot 9 birds in 2 Days in NEPosted by Wes on 18 Apr 2007 | Tagged as: Turkey
On the Friday before the Nebraska shotgun opener a blast of cold weather makes it’s way through and completely shuts these birds down. Here we go again I thought. Later that afternoon the weather broke and I was out roosting birds with my 3 guests from Colorado. It’s opening day and the clouds were gone and the Turkey’s were going crazy on the roost. The birds hit the ground and got quiet. I kept the occasional calling up as I watched birds move through the hills to the South. It was about ½ hour after fly down and I heard a putt behind me. As Mike was rotating into position and had to wait for the hen’s to clear the Tom’s, a shotgun blast interrupts the peaceful morning. Mike harvest’s Tom #1. 5 minutes later we hear a blast from below us in the creek bed. We head down there and Joe has harvested his first Tom of the season. We collect our birds, head towards Rick’s position to take off for breakfast and to buy more tags. We arrive to farm #2 at 12:00. As we’re gearing up for a long afternoon, I spot a Tom strutting on a hill to our north. I split the guys up and take Mike to climb hills and get behind this Tom. We’re calling and he’s working towards us. Not realizing it, we had set up on the other side of a canyon and that bird wasn’t crossing for anyone. About the time we’re thinking of moving, we hear a shot from below. It was Rick with a nice Tom, he couldn’t resist the 15-yard shot opportunity. We decide to move to the far south end of the property and Rick decides to stay back. Mike, Joe and I move on to the south meadow and discover a long beard in the meadow beyond us. We set up and start calling with soft purrs and yelps. 30 some minutes later Mike harvests his 2nd Tom for the day. Mike insists I take Joe for the rest of the afternoon and he will walk back and take Rick for the afternoon. I knew of a group of Turkey’s that love to lurk on this bluff and strut their afternoons away but, we’d have to move quick to get there ahead of them. As luck would have it, they were already there putting on a show for each other. Joe and I just sat there and admired them for over an hour. We decide to hunt our way back to the trucks and discover Rick and Mike already there. Rick was the only one who had purchased 3 tags before the hunt and it was a good thing. He and Mike set up a Jake decoy 45 yards out in the meadow and ½ hour later had 5 Jakes run to the decoy. Rick pulls the trigger one time and only 3 Jakes run away. Yep, 2 birds with one shot – Rick has filled all 3 of his tags within a 4-hour period on opening day. The boys decide to call it a day with 6 birds harvested. It’s colder now on Sunday morning than it was the day before. I decide to go back to the same farm on Sunday but I want to leave the area alone where we had taken 2 the previous morning. We hike back 2 miles to locate the birds I had been watching from a distance. The birds are flying down and hen’d up. They wouldn’t give us the time of day. I decide to mobilize and try to get in front of them. On the way we can hear and see them from time to time. As we stop to listen and call one time I spot 2 jakes and a Tom straight across the creek from us on a bluff. The birds slowly move on with no response to my calling. I decide to go postal on them and the boys agree. We cross the creek and scale the bluff. As we get closer to the top Joe takes a shot and Mike follows up with another one. A great double Tom shoot on the second morning. We have breakfast and head to another farm. Joe wants set up where Rick was the afternoon before and an hour later a Tom makes his way into the field. I give him some soft purrs and he commits to a steady walk towards us. Within 10 minutes he’s literally in our laps and the impossible task is complete. 3 Guests with 9 birds harvested by 3 pm the second day of the season. To my 3 guests: I’d like to thank you gentlemen for giving me the memories of this spectacular weekend, see you next year – Brady Thomas
Comments Off Lane blasts off turkey seasonPosted by Wes on 25 Mar 2007 | Tagged as: Turkey
Welcome to the first installment of the 2007 edition of Turkey Magic! We were in a two-blind Double Bull setup well before sunrise this morning. Our first setup today was where several ridges funnel down into a lush green flat. Picture a field full of short green grass surrounded by Big mature hardwoods and a variety of cedars and evergreens. Beautiful, turkey paradise. While we were setting up the blinds the Gobblers were already going bonkers and it was still blacker than the inside of a cow. Right off the roost we had three toms circle behind the blind gobbling all the way, they never came around to the front, and eventually faded off into the timber. At 8:01 am I decided it was time to move deeper into the woods since the wind was gusting over 20 mph. As the boys and I were picking our way along, me looking for that perfect location for an ambush, two jakes started hammering away no more than 150 yards from us. We threw the blinds up, put the decoy out quick and within 10 minutes both jakes were in full strut, big red white and blue heads floating four yards from the boys’ blind. I got the whole thing on video as Lane thumped the lead Jake in the 12 ring at four paces, MAGNIFICENT!. The dead Jake’s buddy stuck around almost too long, Quaid was able to get a shot off at bird number two at roughly 20 yards, but just as Quaid released, the big bird took a step and Quaid was rewarded with one tail feather cleanly sliced from the young birds tail fan. What a day, Lane bags his first ever turkey, does it with archery tackle, and does it all on video, opening day, 2007. Can’t wait to get after ‘em in Kansas. Good Hunting!
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