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 Friday, December 12, 2008
MN DNR to Shoot 100 Turkeys
Posted by TTH Staff
Reactions are mixed over a plan by the Minnesota DNR to kill 100 birds this winter across 18 north-central Minnesota counties. The turkeys are to be targeted for a DNR study that will analyze stomach and gizzard contents. The DNR plans to donate the meat. Commenting on the story, one reader was favorable to the plan, hoping the DNR would come to his house: “About 5 years ago it started with a dozen turkeys coming to the bird feeders then it was two dozen,” he wrote. “Last year it was 62 ... they are fun to watch but a group that big sure eats a lot.” But another reader had a different view. “Are these crazy guys planning another convention?” he wrote. “I agree this is cheaper -- but if you guys want to eat turkey, buy a license like everyone else.” What do you think about the MN DNR’s plan to shoot 100 turkeys? Source: startribune.com
Friday, December 12, 2008 3:30:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Friday, October 24, 2008
Giving One a Ride
Posted by Jim Schlender
I don't know who coined the phrase, "give him a ride in my truck," but Adam Fleck of Fort Atkinson, Wis., obviously knows what it means. Way to go, Adam! My friends Steve and Sherri Fleck take their son hunting whenever they can, and he was along on two of their successful trips last spring. Looks like Adam has a successful turkey hunting career ahead.

Friday, October 24, 2008 12:48:22 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, October 17, 2008
In Praise of Ugly Calls
Posted by Jim Schlender
In the Winter issue, Brian Lovett uses his new column, "The Complete
Caller," to tell about the merits of the often-overlooked tube call. We
needed photos to go with Brian's article, so he brought in his
10-year-old Perfection brand tube. Here it is on the left. It looks
like a couple scraps of PVC pipe jammed together, and the diaphragm
tucked into the small end is the only clue that it's a turkey call. It
won't win any call-making contests, but so what? When something works
you go with it, and Brian says that's why he still carries it.
That got me thinking about one of my go-to calls. The call on the right
is a crow call from Ben Lee Calls of Coffeeville, Alabama. The late Ben
Rodgers Lee gave it to me during a tour of his little manufacturing
facility in 1989. No, that's not a wooden barrel; it's wood-grain
plastic. And the sticker, what's left of it, further adds to the K-Mart
style. But wow! It blows deep and loud like few other crow imitators
I've heard.
I own several good locator calls, but every winter when I'm sorting
through my mountain of "stuff" in preparation for spring, Ben's call
always ends up in the must-have pile. And as long as it keeps on making
ear-splitting, irritating sounds, it will have a place. 
Friday, October 17, 2008 5:59:05 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, October 03, 2008
Another Tough Turkey
Posted by Jim Schlender
It's ironic that on the same day I was posting Lovett Williams' photo of the strutting hen (see Oct. 1 entry), Turkey & Turkey Hunting online editor Corey Graff was encountering a different hen that was full of herself. The next day he sent me this photo and story:  Turkey vs. Jeep Driving home from the F+W offices, I made a turn onto a lightly traveled country road and came face-to-face with a turkey defiantly standing her ground in the center of the road. I came to a stop. The turkey poked herhead up and seemed to be challenging me -- then ran to one side of the road, turned and then puffed up her chest and stared at my Jeep. As I began to pull forward, she ran back in front of me, so I stopped again. Suddenly the bird turned and ran away down the centerline, then stopped, turned around and again began defiantly posturing. She never strutted, but the display continued for several minutes -- long enough to pull out my camera and shoot a few photos throughthe bug-splattered windshield -- until eventually the bird stepped aside and allowed me to drive past. Even then, shen never ran off. Did this bold bird have little ones in the nearby brush it was protecting? Or did the turkey simply feel like playing chicken? If the latter was the case, the real question is: Who won?
Friday, October 03, 2008 7:26:03 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, October 01, 2008
Cool Strutting Hen Photo
Posted by TTH Staff
Posted by Jim Schlender, Editor Lovett Williams Jr., a longtime contributing editor and Biology columnist just sent in his Q and A column for the March issue (yes, we are already thinking spring around here!). He included a photo of a strutting hen that I thought was so cool I wanted to give everyone a sneak peek.  Williams says that a hen briefly fanning her tail feathers while jousting with rival birds is pretty common, but a hen that is fully fanned and dragging her wing tips like a gobbler is extremely rare. During his countless hours of turkey observations over 50 years, Williams says he has seen this behavior only three times.
Wednesday, October 01, 2008 10:22:21 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, September 29, 2008
Halfway Around the World ...
Posted by TTH Staff
Posted by Jim Schlender, Editor I just got this note and photo from Sgt. Jeremy LaBorde of West Monroe, Louisiana, and thought I'd share it. Thank you Jeremy for your service to our country. Glad you're back, and have a great spring! 
I was a Scout Team Leader in the Army for four years with a total of 27 months spent in Iraq and just finished up my enlistment last June.
I was going through some of my pictures the other day and remembered this one so I figured I would pass this along to show that even halfway around the world there are still a few good turkeys around. We took over this house south of Baghdad last February at the beginning of 3ID's big push to reclaim the area.
The gobbler came with the house, along with 7 dogs and numerous chickens. He only had a 3-4 inch beard but it was good to see something familiar for a change after 13 months in country.
And no, we didn't cook him, even though it would have probably been the best meal we had in a long time. Thanks for putting out a great magazine. Garry Owen and Never Forget!
Monday, September 29, 2008 4:58:13 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Thursday, July 03, 2008
Stray Shots
Posted by TTH Staff
Posted by Jim Schlender, Editor
This blog entry marks the first of what I hope will be many more
dedicated to sharing the countless pictures that I don't know what else
to do with. Here are two to kick off a collection of "stray shots."
 This one was making the e-mail rounds this morning. Ironically, I was
just looking for photos to go with Jim Spencer's article in the Fall
2008 issue (due out mid-August), "The Principles of Camouflage." No,
this one won't be in the article, but it would certainly fit. If you don't get it, you're not looking closely enough. Thanks to Rick White from Hunter's Specialties for forwarding.  Speaking of Rick White, a couple Aprils ago we were walking along the edge of a plowed field in Kentucky when I happened upon this um, impressive, sign. It's a gobbler dropping, I know, but how big did this bird have to be? As I pulled out my Olympus point-and-shoot to snap this picture, it occurred to me that sometimes this job gets a little weird.
Thursday, July 03, 2008 7:30:32 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Kids n Turkeys from 2008
Posted by TTH Staff
Posted by Jim Schlender, Editor
I'm way behind in posting some of the great pictures we've received from this past season. Here are a few of my favorites from friends in the industry.  Hunter Maddy, 8, son of well-known turkey hunter and Quaker Boy pro-staffer Keane Maddy, shot this 23-pound longbeard near home in Centerville, Iowa. "We had three strutters come gobbling every step to us across a 100-yard field. Hunter used his 20 gauge Remington 870 with a Comp-n-Choke tube and No. 6 Hevi-Shot. He crushed the bird at 28 steps. A very exciting morning!" Andy Johnson, a hunter safety instructor in Alabama and Georgia, sent me a  priceless photo of his 2-year-old son, Hunter, with this note: "A few weeks back I was cleaning a turkey while my son was watching. He said, 'I get my gun' and ran inside and came back with his toy rifle. I just happened to look over and here's what I saw. I quickly snapped a cell phone picture of him and the Flambeau King Strut decoy. I think I'm raising a future turkey hunter!"  "By far my most special hunt ever," said Tim Herald, public relations manager for Under Armour, about his 7-year-old son Drew's first turkey. The Heralds live and hunt in Kentucky. Tad Brown, product development manager for Flambeau Outdoors, had a great  morning introducing these youngsters to turkey hunting on a chilly Missouri youth hunt. Preston Tremain, 14, and Makenzie Moore, 11, couldn't have asked for a better guide.
 When Joe Monteleone isn't working in sales for CZ-USA firearms in Kansas, he's usually hunting. This year he took his 7-year-old Nathan out on opening morning of Missouri's youth season. Nathan made a 20-yard shot with a .410. "Talk about a proud moment," Joe said. "It was a huge thrill for both of us!"
Wednesday, June 11, 2008 9:11:33 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, June 04, 2008
June Scribblings on a Spring Past
Posted by TTH Staff
Posted by Brian Lovett, Contributing Editor
A lousy old joke tells us there are two seasons in the North: winter and road construction. I guess that should strike a chord with turkey hunters. After all, don’t we have two distinct periods: the season and the off-season?
Sadly, unless you’re on a plane to New Zealand, we’re well into the latter. And I don’t know about you, but I’m finding it difficult to let go of the former. It seemed like things had just started to “get right” during the final five days of Wisconsin’s season. Birds that had been solidly henned up most of the previous week began getting lonely, and die-hard hunters willing to brave 2:30 a.m. wake-up calls and hordes of hummingbird-sized mosquitoes started scoring consistently.
During the second day of the final period, I got solidly thumped by two field turkeys but decided to try another spot before quitting. I walked into the woods at 10:45 a.m. and was walking out at noon with a gobbler slung over my shoulder. It had been a classic midday hunt, complete with lots of hard gobbling and sunlit strutters slowly coming to the call. I couldn’t have ended my home-state season in better fashion.
I wish I could say the same for Minnesota. My last hunt of the year, with friend and fellow T&TH contributing editor Scott Bestul, proved disappointing, though it wasn’t for lack of turkeys or trying. Both mornings, gobblers did the same thing: hammered on the roost, talked a bit after flydown and then slowly shut up as they drifted away with hens. To make matters worse, I goofed up the only pair of workable turkeys we encountered by misjudging an afternoon setup and missing a bird with a poor shot.
While driving home from that hunt, feeling the effects of several hard weeks in the woods, I told myself I was ready for spring to end. I was dead tired and needed to catch up on matters I’d brushed aside during the season.
But that weekend, I began to miss it. I’d run a call here and there while putting my stuff away. And then I’d think about the woodpeckers, whitetail fawns and other cool stuff I’d seen afield.
By Monday, I was in full-blown withdrawal. In fact, I’m still there. The only therapy, I guess, is a bit of fishing, some baseball on TV and frequent daydreams to appreciate all the wonderful moments I experienced in the turkey woods.
I’m sure you’re in a similar state of mind. It’s OK, friend. We’ll make it. Just don’t tell my wife that the fall season opens in 114 short days.
Wednesday, June 04, 2008 4:05:56 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, June 03, 2008
(Way Up) North for Turkeys
Posted by TTH Staff
Posted by Jim Schlender, Editor
You get some strange looks sometimes when you say you're going "Up North" for a turkey hunt, especially when you live in Wisconsin. But a couple weeks ago that's where I went: to Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
My friend Rick White from Hunter's Specialties drove up from Iowa with his son, Dan. I brought my son, Jacob. And Pat Muffler, an H.S. field-staffer from Marquette who had graciously invited us up to his stomping grounds, would be hunting with his son, Philip. I guess you could call it an impromptu youth hunt. Dan, at 15, already has nearly 20 turkeys to his credit. Philip, 13, had killed a fall gobbler last season, and 12-year–old Jacob would be trying for his first gobbler.
(By the way, Michigan is "youth friendly," in that non-resident turkey tags are the same price as resident tags, only $15. It's a neat program and a good way to welcome more youth hunters to the sport.)
It was surreal to listen to gobbling in the same cedar swamps and pine forests where I'm used to hunting ruffed grouse. The turkeys were there, and lots of them. Everyone we met had a story about turkeys in their backyard and invited us to have at them. Not surprisingly, those dumb-acting turkeys that were pecking around rural bird feeders in the dead of winter had morphed into unpredictable, mostly quiet and now henned-up birds.
At the end of Day One our group was 0-for-6, and by noon on the second day only 13-year-old Philip had filled his tag. He will have a tough time topping his first spring bird: The tom's spurs measured just a shade under 1 7/8 inches! It was a bird Pat had tried to work a couple other times and the story was always the same. His calling riled up the hens, which led the tom away. This time, he and Philip sat down, shut up and waited on the tom to show up at his mid-morning strut zone. And it worked, perfectly.
Jacob and I hadn't worked a bird close in two days, so on the last morning we took a lesson from Pat and set up on a field edge at a farm owned by one of Pat's friends several miles north of Escanaba. We had good insider information telling us that turkeys had been traveling the narrow corridor with some consistency. It was another no-gobbling morning, but before I had time to be disappointed, a whole mob of hens showed up not long after flydown, trailed by a lone longbeard. I resisted the temptation to call, "just for effect," and let them work their way toward us. Finally, Jacob was able to drop the hammer on his first tom.
I have lots more to share about hunting the U.P., but I'm goint to save it for one of the Spring 2009 issues. In the meantime, check this page again soon for more photos of youth hunters from the 2008 season.
Tuesday, June 03, 2008 4:45:57 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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