Turkey Scratchings - News, Notes and Hunt Reports from the Turkey & Turkey Hunting Staff - Thursday, May 01, 2008

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 Friday, May 02, 2008
Biology Lesson on Turkey Crops
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Jim Schlender, Editor

tky crop snails.jpgA reader identified only as Lowell recently e-mailed this photo with a note:

"I shot this turkey last weekend near Ozona, Texas, and after cleaning it I checked its crop to see what it had been eating and discovered all these small snails. Would a turkey be able to digest the shells and is it common?"

I forwarded the photo to our Biology columnist, Lovett Williams Jr., and this was his reply:

"Yes, turkeys can digest them, shell and all. I suspect some of the shells remain in the gizzard while being ground. The hens are said to eat snails to provide minerals for their egg shells but I think they can get enough from their bones and then replace them in the diet later. Gobblers are known to eat snails for the nutrition. There's a lot of meat in escargot."

The shells are interesting enough, but I was also struck by the variety of items in this bird's crop. And I wondered about the red things ... Chili peppers? I wonder if Lowell likes his turkey meat extra spicy.



5/2/2008 3:27:06 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, May 01, 2008
What's Worse, Rain or Wind?
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Brian Lovett, Contributing Editor

Quiz time: What’s worse, rain or wind?

Trick question. Neither. For me, at least, the answer is lightning.

And that’s just what Steve Stoltz and I were facing – well, more accurately, running from – during the early-morning hours April 25 in northern Missouri. Even after several days of steady rain, another ear-shattering thunderstorm was descending on the Heartland.

On a positive note, Stoltz and I made it to the truck without being electrocuted and only partially drenched. On the down side, we’d left several hard-gobbling turkeys at our fly-down setup.

“Well, hopefully it will clear up and we can get back in there,” said Stoltz, a world-champion caller and pro-staffer for Mossy Oak and Knight & Hale Game Calls.

Later that morning, it seemed like the storm had passed. Sun peeked through the clouds, and the ominous flashes of lightning disappeared to the southeast. And as promised, Stoltz and I returned to our original setup, only to hear a turkey gobbling on his own.

“He’s up in that pretty timber,” Stoltz said. “But that’s across the creek.”

Ordinarily, that wouldn’t have been a big deal. However, because of the recent heavy rains, the typically narrow, shallow creek had turned into a muddy torrent. We sure couldn’t get across it without a boat, and it was a good bet the turkey probably wouldn’t hop it, either.

stoltz2.jpgStill, Stoltz went to work. We set up along a fence line bordered by two large fields near the creek. The gobbler responded immediately to Stoltz’s calling but didn’t move.

After about a half-hour the situation hadn’t changed much. If anything, it seemed like the turkey had walked up the hill a bit and might be losing interest. Stoltz and I looked at each other and started stirring. But just then, a small dot appeared across the field.

“Steve, it’s a hen,” I whispered.

We sat down again and watched the bird feed slowly along the field edge. Moments later, another hen joined the first.

Meanwhile, the gobbler seemed to fire up again and began circling the hill toward our setup. Stoltz hit him with some yelps and excited cutting, and the bird went crazy.

Within minutes, the bird had circled to within 80 yards of our setup — still across the raging creek, of course — and was camped straight away from us, gobbling his head off. He stayed there for several minutes, and then walked to our right, camping under a large oak obscured by creekside brush.

“Dang it,” I thought. If he didn’t jump the creek in front of us — an obvious crossing spot — there was no way he would come through the thick foliage to our right.

That seemed to be an accurate assessment. The bird gobbled and spit and drummed regularly but refused to budge. But that’s when Stoltz pulled out his ace. He went into an extended clucking and purring sequence, mimicking hens that were feeding in the field but wouldn’t approach the gobbler — much like the actual hens that were still behind us. Then, Stoltz went quiet.

He didn’t call for 10 minutes. Then 20. Then a half-hour.

Soon, the gobbler appeared to be getting desperate. He gobbled hard a few times from under the oak, and then seemed to drift left. Soon, I heard soft crunching in the streamside brush.

“He’s moving,” I thought.

A raucous gobble confirmed it. He was coming back toward the creek.
I never heard the bird fly over the water, but seconds later, a brilliant red head popped up over the rise. The gobbler briefly went into strut, took a step and then craned his neck to look at the two hens in the field. My shot punctuated the hunt, and the longbeard toppled down the creek bank.

stoltz1.jpgOn my way to the bird, I checked my watch. The hunt had lasted 90 minutes, and Stoltz hadn’t made a peep for 30 of those. We whooped in celebration, retrieved the turkey and relived the great hunt. It had been a treat to see Stoltz work that bird, and I told him so.

“Well, I just wanted to let him know the ‘hens’ were still here, but they weren’t coming to him,” he said. “And then I just played on his ego. It didn’t hurt that we had two live birds behind us, and I’m sure he could see them where he was at.”

To top things off, we returned to the truck just before another lightning storm zoomed in from the northwest. Temperatures plummeted 15-some degrees in the next hour.

I guess we endured the worst Missouri could throw at us that day. But thanks to Stoltz, the best was riding home with us in the truck.



5/1/2008 10:02:21 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, April 28, 2008
This Close to Normalcy
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Jim Schlender


s melum 08.jpgSusie Melum almost did it. She was nearly able to shake turkey fever. Hang up the camo. Put away the shotgun. Sleep in on Saturdays during spring … Almost, I said.

The turkeys haven’t been kind to my co-worker for the past few seasons. Then, after dealing with crummy weather and uncooperative birds last week, she confided to a friend that it just wasn’t fun anymore. Not that she hasn’t enjoyed some success. For a few seasons Susie killed turkeys with scary consistency. Then she ran into a bit of a drought, which is what happens when you use all your luck early in the game, and the thrill started to wear off.

So, Susie comes to the office this morning with the spurs from a tom she killed Sunday morning. Actually, spurs isn’t a fair description. They’re more like hooks — hooks with a sweeping curve that end in icepick-pointy sharpness. Once-in-a-lifetime, limb-hanging hooks that could put your eye out. They’re better than 11/2 inches, and that’s saying something for this part of Wisconsin, which experiences heavy pressure for six weeks every spring.

s melum spurs 08.jpgAfter many congratulations and high-fives, we made Susie recount her hunt. “Really,” she said, “after last week I was so done with turkeys. I was disgusted. But I’m OK now.”

I had to laugh at the reality of Brian Lovett’s brief answer: “Oh Susie,” he said with a sigh, “you were this close to normalcy.”




4/28/2008 12:09:15 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, April 25, 2008
The Noncommittal Sort
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Jake Edson, F+W Outdoors Editor
 
Hindsight is 20/20.  After any turkey encounter, you can always sit back and analyze the reasons for success and failure. That's why the best hunters are those who have spent much more time in the woods than I have.

April 23rd's lesson? Sometimes it's best to hold your cards for a while.

After a failed early morning set up, I slowly worked my way along a fence running down a wooded ridge trying to strike a bird. As I neared the end, I inched forward for a quick check on a small ridge-shelf green field. When I spotted the top of a tail fan protruding from a small fold, I dropped to my knees and crawled forward. Another glance revealed a trio of strutters courting a half dozen hens.

I dumped my vest, grabbed one call and wiggled to a fallen oak along the fence. When I peaked over, I found the flock in the same depression about 70 yards into the field. A fourth gobbler spit and spun 20 yards closer to the fence, but another 40 yards down from my position. I thought about trying to crawl closer to the fourth bird, but the cover was wimpy and my chances were poor. I tried calling the fourth tom over, but he spurned my yelps and joined the flock.
april.jpg
As the sun climbed, I sat and watched the toms dance, alternately trying to call the birds and just waiting to see if one of the strutters would drift a bit closer. I figured a passive approach would leave me more options if the birds changed their attitude.

Finally, about the time my back began to seize, my patience was rewarded. A hen dropped into breeding position and two toms rushed her. The bigger tom jumped high into the air and let loose with a series of vicious kicks on his rival. He then hopped on the hen and bred her. The defeated tom quickly deflated and decided that timid, unseen hen in the woods might be a better option than the girls that were obviously spoken for. He tucked his wings and strode straight into a pattern of Winchester Xtended range No. 6s.

Sure, I could have have tried to incite the hens. I certainly thought about it. But they might have also turned and marched their mates the other way. In this case, patience paid off. Next time, I might not be so lucky. But then I'll learn another lesson -- the hard way.



4/25/2008 2:13:34 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, April 24, 2008
One Foot Over the Line?
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Brian Lovett, Contributing Editor


I tossed and turned all night worrying about the setup. Then I fretted over it while driving to the woods. And when it came time to decide, I still didn’t know.

While scouting April 22, the day before my first Wisconsin season opened, two friends and I found loads of turkey sign around a corn-stubble field surrounded by pines and a hardwood ridge. The area was a no-brainer, but all those big trees posed a problem. After all, the birds could roost right off the field edge, and because the moon was almost full, the area would be brighter than a firefly long before flydown.

The safe play would be to sneak up a logging road and listen from a remote corner of the field, far from paranoid eyes in the trees. The aggressive move would be to slip along the pines at the field’s northern edge so I was closer to the suspected roost areas.

Well, at 4:45 a.m., I was still hemming and hawing. So, perhaps being a bitlovett wis 08.jpg anxious, I chose the aggressive option, and friend Craig Netzer and I slipped along the pines until we reached the base of the connecting ridge.

Within minutes, several birds fired up from some big white pines across the field. Good deal. We slipped back into the red pines and set up, and I scratched out some soft tree-yelping. And that’s about when another bird fired up — directly over Craig’s head. I swear it rained needles down on his camo cap.

The turkey didn’t gobble much, so I think he was a bit “off” because of the shadowy shapes he’d just seen on the field edge. However, the gobblers across the field choked themselves for 15 minutes. Then, heavy wingbeats indicated they were headed toward the ground.

Two birds landed in the field about 100 steps away. After gobbling twice and strutting and drumming a bit, the birds marched in, and I shot the lead longbeard at 28 steps.

It was 5:35 a.m., and honestly, I could barely make out the green and red on my fiber-optic sights.

Had we been any later or made one stupid move, we probably would have busted countless turkeys out of the area. But thankfully, we had been early — and fortunate — enough to pull it off.

To make the day even better, I joined landowner Steve Pethke for a midmorning hunt. After several fruitless calling sequences, we hiked to the top of a long ridge, called and then listened. I started saying something to Steve when I heard what I thought was a crow. Steve knew better.

“Gobble!” he said. “Let’s get up on top of the ridge and get a fix on him.”

We did, and the next calling sequence was met by a thunderous response — about 80 steps away on a wooded point. The bird was just out of sight over the rise.

Steve scrambled for a large boulder, and I settled behind him at a birch tree. Figuring we were OK, I eased out some soft yelps on a glass call, and the longbeard hammered back. Good. He was headed directly toward us.
After a bit of purring, some great spitting and drumming and a tense 90 seconds, Steve’s gun roared, and longbeard No. 2 was flopping.

Again, had we rushed in or taken that proverbial “one step too many,” we would have boogered that lonely gobbler. But thankfully, someone up above must have been looking out for us.

Maybe this marks the start of a new trend. Could I possibly go an entire season without bumping, boogering or spooking a gobbler? Ha! We all know better.

But for that day at least, the sight of two gobblers in the truck and the smile on Steve’s face helped me avoid such gloomy thoughts.
 



4/24/2008 9:29:08 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Lotsa Beards on Mississippi Turkey
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Jim Schlender


Sheesh! Multiple-bearded turkeys are always interesting, but I'd also like to know the spur length on this non–typical. Neat story.

http://www.djournal.com/pages/story.asp?ID=271983&pub=1



4/22/2008 9:43:39 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, April 21, 2008
Working Out the Kinks
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Brian Lovett, Contributing Editor

An old turkey hunting cliché tells us that every day is opening day. Yeah, I know that’s pretty lame. But there’s also a lot of truth there.

I was reminded of that this past week, when I joined co-workers Craig Netzer and Dustin Reid for an opening-week Wisconsin hunt. The pair had been seeing wads of gobblers at a nearby property, much of which consisted of open fields and pastures. We planned to set up in a fence-line blind and try to lure the birds across a field and into range — something they had been doing on their own, anyway.

craig dustin 08.jpgOf course, nothing went as planned. “Our” turkeys were roosted in a swamp across the field, and they tore it up that morning.

Unfortunately, they pitched down the other way and pretty much disappeared. Meanwhile, a bird that was roosted to the north sailed into the pasture and landed 75 steps behind us, catching me flat-footed. As we slowly turned to face the gobbler, a hen joined him in the pasture, and he began strutting and gobbling for her. After a few minutes, the disinterested hen flew over the pasture fence and walked directly behind us in the field. I figured the gobbler would follow at any minute … but no. Instead, he dropped out of strut and slowly walked away over the rise.

It was 5:45 a.m., and our morning was pretty much finished.

Lacking a better plan, we returned to the pasture blind the next day, and things took a turn for the worse. First, two hunters walked directly under the turkeys on the neighboring property — while wearing headlamps — and then climbed into a tree stand about two trees over from where the birds were roosted. Then, they began cutting and yelping incessantly. Believe it or not, the birds gobbled once or twice at it. But as you probably guessed, they flew down the other way and clammed up.

Meanwhile, there was nothing gobbling at our place. Figuring we’d wait 15 minutes and then hit another area, I called a bit and then set my slate call down. That’s when I saw it.

“Dustin, is that a turkey on top of the hill?” I whispered.

Sure enough. Within minutes, three jakes made a beeline for our decoys.

Dustin eased slowly to his right, got the gun into position and then made a great shot on the lead bird.

Sweet. A seemingly rotten morning was suddenly a day to remember.
Of course, Craig still had a tag, so we went to another spot and immediately heard a bird gobble on its own. Slipping into a small pine grove bordered by a hayfield, Craig set up, and I called again to get a fix on the turkeys. They were several hundred yards away, past another thick pine stand.

For a while, the gobblers — I figured there were two, maybe three — hit every call. Then, they gobbled intermittently, sometimes at calling but also at crows, a garbage truck and seemingly nothing at all. And they never moved.
Figuring the setup was hopeless, Dustin and I had never gotten into position. In fact, we were kneeling at the field edge about 10 steps behind Craig. I was about to suggest that we leave when a gobble erupted 200 yards in front of us. Holy smokes — it was from the field edge. However, that was followed by a half-gobble and raucous jake yelping, so I pretty much disregarded the first gobble.

And minutes later, when I saw a turkey slipping toward us through the pines, I expected a jake to appear. Imagine my surprise when I glimpsed golden-brown feathers and heard the prettiest little hen yelp in the world.

That’s when I heard the drumming. Great. The hen had brought along a strutter. No wait — two strutters. Better, the birds were over the rise and out of sight from Craig, headed straight toward me and Dustin, who were kneeling like altar boys in the open. There was no doubt that we’d be busted shortly.

Within seconds, two hens and the strutters popped into the field behind us. One gobbler must have seen us move, because he rubber-necked it across the field into some hardwoods. Still, the hens and remaining longbeard slowly circled around behind us and to the left.

Dustin and I frantically hissed at Craig to crawl up toward us so he could shoot the turkey. Meanwhile, the birds were slowly moving out of range, so I called once. The gobbler responded, actually turned away from the hen and began walking toward us.

As Craig slithered to get into position, I alternately glimpsed the bird’s fan and head as he angled toward us, strutting just below the lip of the hill. When the gun went off, I jumped up, saw the flopping turkey and breathed a huge sigh of relief. Somehow, we’d pulled it off.

The moral of the story? Maybe every day really is opening day. Or maybe you’d better be ready to accept good fortune when it falls in your lap.





4/21/2008 4:22:45 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Friday, April 18, 2008
More Cool Stuff from the NWTF Convention
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Jim Schlender


Here are a few more pix of friends and some interesting products from the February NWTF Convention in Atlanta ...

bobbleheads.jpgRicky Joe Bishop needs no introduction. He's a champion caller and Realtree pro-staffer, as well as a product designer for Flambeau Outdoors. And then there's his own line of Wild Bobbles. Wild what? Bishop's product line includes a Bobble Buck and Bobble Turkey that you can mount on the dashboard of your truck. Will having a Wild Bobble product help you kill a turkey? No. Can you resist buying one? Betcha can't.






she_safari.jpgYou want your wife/honey/significant other to join you for a turkey hunt. She resists. You outfit her with a set of She Safari clothing. She's hooked. Here, She Safari founder Pam Zaitz, a diehard hunter, shows off some lightweight, female-inspired turkey hunting clothing designed just for ladies. T&TH photographer Tes Randle Jolly photographed Pam for the lead photo of the bow-hunting article in our Spring issue.














harold-david.jpgIt's always a pleasure to stop to visit with Harold Knight and David Hale. Lots of new Knight & Hale products for 2008, including the new Hammer Series of slate calls, meant lots of booth traffic.













morrett h.s.jpgHunter's Specialities pro-staffer and champion caller Matt Morrett showed me a prototype of the company's new tent blind, due out this fall. I recently hunted from one of these blinds during a rainy afternoon in Oklahoma. It pops up in seconds and is large enough to accommodate two or even three hunters at a time.









4/18/2008 1:32:15 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Neat Blog Entry from Photographer Russell Graves
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Jim Schlender

You have seen photos by Russell Graves in several of the latest print issues of Turkey & Turkey Hunting. Graves, a photographer from Childress, Texas, has a Web site with a blog of his own. Recently he has been experimenting with storytelling about turkey hunting via photos, audio and music. It's neat stuff that will make you want to go hunting right NOW. Check out his most recent creation here.



4/16/2008 9:00:05 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Monday, April 14, 2008
A Young Hunter Catches Turkey Fever
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Brad Rucks, Publisher

Wisconsin's youth turkey season took place this past weekend, a few days before the opening of our state's regular season. During this special weekend, any youth age 12-16 with a tag for the regular season can hunt. If the youth doesn't get a turkey on youth weekend, he or she can still use their tag during the regular season. The season couldn't get here fast enough for me because I finally had a 12-year-old I could take afield -- my daughter Cassie.

Unfortunately, the forecast called for some nasty weather. During the past week we'd had nothing but rain and high winds. To make matters worse, the weatherman was calling for snow. By Saturday morning the ground was completely covered in white. Snow fell throughout the day, and turkey activity on our hunting ground was non-existent. I told Cassie before she went to bed Saturday night that the weather was supposed to clear and the turkeys should be gobbling in the morning.

Well, I was partially right. The skies had cleared but the birds were silent on the roost. In fact, we never heard a gobble, not even in the distance, that morning. It was sunny but windy. Patience has never been a virtue of mine, so it wasn't long before we were walking and trying to strike a bird. At the second spot we stopped to call I thought I heard a gobble. We set up and I called again. The response was immediate and sounded closer. I waited a few minutes and hit the call again and once again he gobbled. There was creek between us and the bird. It sounded like the bird was headed for a dike that would bring him across the creek. The next time I called, to my surprise two birds gobbled. Now we had the original gobbler coming from one direction and pair coming from another.

cassieturkey1.jpgI told Cassie to swing her gun toward a birch tree on the left because that bird sounded closest. Seconds later we saw him running toward us. At 35 yards he stopped. Cassie was aiming but she had forgotten to take the safety off. I whispered, "Take the gun off safety." She tried frantically but couldn't reach the button. I watched her fingers work toward it and finally she was able to push the button. At the click the bird stopped and lifted his head for a better look. This gave Cassie time to put the red dot on his neck. A second later the gun roared and the turkey was knocked backward. I knew she had made a great shot. I jumped to my feet and she asked, "Should I shoot him again?" I told that bird wasn't going anyplace. She was jumping up and down and all she could say was, "I shot a turkey! I shot a turkey!" I gave her a high-five and a big hug and told her it just doesn't get any better than this.

It was a great hunt that will make the memory of a lifetime. When we got to the bird we saw it was a beautiful 2-year-old with an 8.5" beard. He weighed 20 pounds. 

Some in the hunting community frown on allowing someone to hunt before the regular season, but in my eyes it's much better to let our youngsters experience turkey hunting when the birds are responding well to calling so they can catch the fever. If hunting is to grow it has to come from us getting more youths involved. I know one young hunter who already can't wait for the next season to start! 



4/14/2008 10:01:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2]
 Sunday, April 13, 2008
OK in Oklahoma
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Jim Schlender, Editor

okl benelli.JPGJust got back from a hunt with Rut-N-Strut Guide Service in Sayre, Oklahoma. Rut-N-Strut owner Todd Rogers has access to thousands of acres, and it is crawling with birds. Rick White and Phillip Vanderpool of Hunter's Specialties have filmed hunts at Todd's place for years, so they served as guides and "chief information officers" for our group of writers, along with H.S. p.r. guy Mike Capps and Benelli product manager Jason Evans.

The first evening White and I sat atop a hill and watched nearly 200 turkeys stream out of the hills and into a creek bottom where they went to roost in the huge cottonwoods. We knew where we would be the next morning.

Little did we know that several forces would work against us. First, there must have been some sort of mega-hatch last spring, because everywhere we went we encountered jakes by the dozen ... or two dozen ... or even three dozen. A couple times we were working a gobbler only to have a gang of jakes get between us and the tom, effectively cutting him off. One rainy afternoon I watched four jakes harass a gobbler in a wheat field. They chased him around and took turns pummeling him for several minutes. Finally the gobbler lay down as if to say he'd had enough, and the jakes wandered off. (A couple minutes later the tom got up and ran to catch up with the jakes, so maybe he got what he deserved.)

Did I mention rain? We got 5 to 8 inches, depending on which meterologist you believed, and most of it fell sideways. And when it wasn't raining, the wind blew, often gusting to 40 mph. There was plenty of thunder, lightning and hail, too.

I managed to win ugly at mid-morning the first day. A big thunderstorm had just passed when Rick and I were driving down a gravel road and spotted several birds -- sex and size undetermined -- in a cow pasture along a sparsely wooded creek. They looked like jakes, but Rick dropped me off so I could get a closer look. I had only crept about 100 yards down the deep creek bottom when a gobble rang out from the pasture. I got next to the biggest tree I could find and yelped. Another gobble! And then I waited ... and waited ... and waited. I was getting wetter by the minute and because this was my first hunt of the year I had zero patience. I decided to sneak up the bank and peek over to see what was going on. The clay bank had turned into a slip-n-slide from all the rain, and about halfway up it my feet shot out behind me and I slammed to the ground ... sort of. I cleverly used my shotgun to cushion my fall, being sure to smack the rib against my lower lip so my face wouldn't get muddy. I came up spitting blood and in the process blew my diaphragm call into a cowpie.

Now it was pouring and I was thoroughly disgusted. I slowly crawled the last 15 feet and peeked into the pasture. Jake, jake, jake, jake, jake ... tom! They were only 30 yards away and headed straight at me, the gobbler in the lead. I raised my head a couple inches and he stopped with that "What the ... ?" look, so I vented my frustration on him.

The 3-year-old was as soaked as I was, and the weather never even gave me a chance to take a few pictures. The photo at the top of the page is of the Benelli Super Black Eagle II with Steady Grip stock and Federal Heavyweight Mag Shock No. 7 loads I was using. The turkey is courtesy of writer Bob Humphrey, who graciously allowed me to borrow it so I could snap a few pictures during a rare appearance of sunshine.

oklahoma.JPGAt left is the kind of terrain you encounter in western Oklahoma. As you can see, it's all about finding wooded creek bottoms. At least that's a good place to start hunting if you're unfamiliar with the area. I have a lot more to say about the gun-and-load combinations we were using on this trip. Our sighting-in sessions revealed some impressive patterns. I will have to get out to the range and shoot a few more shells to give you a complete report.

As for Rut-N-Strut, this year's jake population should virtually guarantee a bumper crop of 2-year-olds for next season. For more information, contact Todd Rogers at 580.799.1920.



4/13/2008 1:53:07 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]
 Thursday, April 10, 2008
Ready to Hunt
Posted by TTH Staff

Posted by Jake Edson, F+W Outdoors EditorDSC_9387.jpg

Some hunters like outfitting their guns, playing with chokes and sights and whatever, for hours on end. Me? I'd rather just grab a gun and hunt. 
If this mindset seems to fit you, and you're in the market for a turkey gun, Winchester's new Super X3 Extreme Turkey combo is what you need. The gun comes straight from the factory with a TruGlo red dot scope and an extra-full extended turkey choke. No messing around. Just grab a box of Winchester Xtended range 6s, take a few shots to make sure the dot is dialed in and you're ready to roll a gobbler past 40 yards.
The active valve system reduces felt recoil, even with heavy 31/2-inch turkey loads, and the 24-inch barrel is easy to sneak in and around cover. Extra features include a Mossy Oak New Break Up protective Dura-Touch Armor coating on the weather-resistant, composite stock and a .742-inch back-bore for better patterns. Steel sling swivel studs are included.
511082l.jpg



4/10/2008 3:18:40 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0]