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 Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Chris Parrish Wins Third World Championship
Posted by Brian Lovett
Chris Parrish, of Centralia, Mo., recently won his third World turkey calling title.
The 66th annual World Championship Turkey Calling Contest was held July 17 through 19 in conjunction with the Birmingham Deer and Turkey Show in Birmingham, Ala.
Parrish, also a two-time NWTF Grand National Turkey Calling Contest champion, won a call-off with second-place finisher James Harrison, of Hillsboro, Mo., to claim the title.
Here, courtesy of our good friend Steve Stoltz, is a list of the top 12 Open Division callers.
1) Chris Parrish, Centralia, Mo. 2) James Harrison, Hillsboro, Mo. 3) Shane Hendershot, Zanesville, Ohio 4) Josh Grossenbacher, Ohio 5) Billy Yargus, Ewing, Mo. 6) Sadler McGraw, Camden, Ala. 7) Matt VanCise, Pa. 8) Mark Prudhomme, S.C. 9) Jim Pollard, Ark. 10) Mitchell Johnson, N.C. 11) Jesse Martin, Ky. 12) Steve Stoltz, Mo.
Tuesday, July 28, 2009 8:58:06 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Big Harvest Numbers From Two Titans
Posted by Brian Lovett
Two big turkey hunting states posted excellent harvest numbers this past spring.
As first reported May 13 by turkeyandturkeyhunting.com forum member "Ozarks Hillbilly," Missouri hunters shot 41,830 birds during the three-week regular season and 2,883 during the youth season, for a total of 44,713 birds.
The regular-season harvest was down about 3.7 percent from 2008 but higher than predicted by the Missouri Department of Conservation. Click here, and then scroll down for a full report.
Meanwhile, the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources recently announced that hunters shot 52,581 birds during the Spring 2009 season. That was down slightly from the record Spring 2008 harvest of 52,814 turkeys. The Spring 2009 success rate was about 24 percent, down from about 25 percent in 2008. Click here for a full report.
One comment: The difference between the Wisconsin and Missouri spring harvests might seem significant, but remember that Missouri has a three-week season, two-bird season limit and 1 p.m. daily closure. Wisconsin has six five-day periods and all-day hunting. Further, after tags are issued through the initial draw, hunters can purchase leftover permits — often available for the fourth through sixth weeks — until they're gone, letting them hunt three or four time periods with multiple tags during later seasons.
Wednesday, June 24, 2009 7:32:39 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Turkey Causes Manure Truck Crash
Posted by Brian Lovett
You really can't make this stuff up.
From the Associated Press:
OSWEGATCHIE, N.Y. — A wild turkey landed inside the cab of a manure-hauling tractor trailer, startling the driver and sending the truck rolling into a ditch off a northern New York road.
State police said Scott Fisher, 38, was traveling in St. Lawrence County near the Canadian border when the turkey flew in through an open window.
Click here to read the entire story.
Tuesday, June 23, 2009 10:01:53 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, June 09, 2009
Analysis: Simple Truths Remain
Posted by Brian Lovett
If you're like me, the first few weeks after turkey season serve as time to reflect on spring and analyze wins and losses.
As I do this every year, I tend to stumble back to a few simple truths. None are revolutionary; some are downright basic. Yet every turkey hunter can relate to them.
Here are some examples:
It's easy to identify poison ivy. But if you don't see it, you're in for a long month, brother.
To paraphrase Jim Spencer, if you sit down wrong, you're beat. And you will do this more often than not.
If a hunt is going too well to be true, just wait.
Sleep deprivation can really affect your mental capacity. Also, sleep deprivation can really affect your mental capacity.
Gobblers really don't read the playbook presented in hallowed journals such as Turkey & Turkey Hunting.
If you move, he will see you — guaranteed. In fact, he might even see you if you think about moving.
Your screw-ups stay with you longer than your successes. A lot longer.
Sleep deprivation can really ... uh, wait a minute.
No matter how tough your spring was, you can't wait till fall or the next spring.
Tuesday, June 09, 2009 7:54:32 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, June 05, 2009
First-Timer Breaks Ohio Record
Posted by TTH Staff
by Brian Lovett, editor

Ohio hunter Trace Claypool scored a record bird May 3 on his first-ever turkey hunt.
Claypool shot a hen with a 9-inch beard. After consulting with the National Wild Turkey Federation, he learned the previous record for a hen beard in Ohio was 8.5 inches.
About 15 percent of hens grow beards. However, they are typically thin and rarely grow longer than 7 inches. The national record for a hen beard is 11 inches.
Claypool is getting the record-setting hen mounted.
Friday, June 05, 2009 8:08:06 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, May 27, 2009
At the End? Long Live Turkey Season
Posted by TTH Staff
by Brian Lovett, editor

I should feel good.
I'm caught up on sleep, and my tick bites are healing. My truck isn't jammed with junk, and my workroom is somewhat orderly.
But I feel like garbage, and you know why.
The Spring 2009 turkey season is finished, at least for me. Sure, some folks in Kansas, Nebraska and the Northeast have a few more days left, but the end is coming.
No more crisp gobbling mornings. No fly-down jitters. No floating your best yelps and clucks into the timber. And no more face-to-beak interaction with America's greatest game animal. When the season winds down, it seems like reality slaps you right in the face.
But wait. Those fans, beards and feet are still drying in your basement, right? Also, you still have to send photos and stories to your turkey hunting buddies across the country.
Of course, we all need to thank the landowners who let us tromp around their dirt this spring. And fall seasons are only a few brief months away.
No, maybe I'm wrong.
Perhaps turkey hunting endures. The pursuit part of the cycle has concluded, but the spirit and obsession of the year-round turkey nut lives on.
Turkey season is done. Long live turkey season.
Wednesday, May 27, 2009 7:53:54 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Another One in the Books
Posted by Brian Lovett
I had no intention of hunting this past Saturday morning, but something rousted me out of bed.
"I need to know what they do," I thought. So off I went.
"They" were two gobblers I'd twice had at 60 steps that week. And after looking over the area Friday evening, I saw exactly what they'd done. The birds had flown into a hayfield, walked south along the edge, and then entered the woods via an old logging road near a wood pile. I'd struck them from farther south and then watched them skirt past me in the timber.
"All I need to do is get by the old road, and they'll walk right down my gun barrel," I thought.
After flydown, things were looking good. The birds got into the field and headed toward me. Within minutes, a hen and jake were 20-some steps away. The longbeards would be there any minute.
Or not. I glanced to my left and saw the gobblers chasing a hen 100 steps out in the field. Then, the birds started to drift left. They were going around me.
Actually, they walked right past my setup from the previous day. I fell in behind them, but as you know, that's never a good play. It didn't work that day, either. They'd dodged me again.
"Well, that's it," I thought as I walked back to my truck. "Another spring in the books."
I silently wished those turkeys hadn't been so difficult and unpredictable. But then I quickly reminded myself about the nature of the bird. There could be no other way.
With luck, I'd be treated to more of that maddening, unpredictable behavior in fall and next spring.
Tuesday, May 26, 2009 4:27:37 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, May 22, 2009
Editor Finds Rest, Peace
Posted by TTH Staff
by Brian Lovett, editor
After whiffing on the hottest turkey I'd seen in years (see the previous blog entry), the pressure was on.
Trying to seem unfazed by the miss, I headed to a good roost spot the next morning. However, after hearing only one gobble and suffering numerous mosquito bites, a change of scenery was in order.
I drove to a spot I hadn't hunted all season and prepared to walk and strike a long hardwood ridge. After my first series of yelps, two birds fired back on the neighbor's ridge. There was a large hayfield between us, so I had no choice but to sit five yards into the woods and try to call them across.
And it worked ... Almost. The birds gobbled themselves into a frenzy, came off the ridge and entered the field. There was a small rise between me and them, so I figured they'd at least top that to seek the hen.
Instead, they stayed just below the rise, gobbling their fool heads off. Occasionally, I could see one of the birds about 80 yards away. Once, I glimpsed the closer bird's head at about 60 steps.
Eventually, the gobblers drifted off and lost interest, and I lost hope. I went to work and tried to form a game plan for the morning.
And then I got lucky. On the way home from work, I drove past a large farm I have permission to hunt. There, like a gift from heaven, was a black puffball in a stubble field. Somehow, things fell together, and 20 minutes later, I was toting a dandy 3-year-old to my truck.
Now, I can look back on the spring in peace. Unless, of course, I go back after the two field birds.
Friday, May 22, 2009 3:32:21 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, May 20, 2009
Surprise! Awful Hunt Turns Out on Top
Posted by Brian Lovett
by Brian Lovett
Only turkey hunting could turn something so wonderful into something so awful.
There I was, hunkered against a tree, listening to a gobbler hammer nonstop from the limb 100 yards away. He'd climbed all over my first tree-yelp, so I was eagerly awaiting flydown.
And fly down he did — across an open hayfield to his landing pad, 20 yards to my left. Seconds later, his white head bobbed through the woods, right down my gun barrel.
It was still a little dark, I guess, because I really couldn't see my fiber-optic sights that well. No matter. I'd checked them seconds earlier and was sure they were lined up correctly.
So when the eager bird cleared a small group of birches, I sent 2 ounces of Winchester's finest his way. Instead of the expected smash and flop, however, I saw a lurch and run.
What? No way.
Yep. A clean miss at 14 steps. It was not even 5:30 a.m., and my day was done.
I hope that wasn't my final chance this spring. But if it was, the encounter was certainly memorable. Excruciating, but memorable.
Wednesday, May 20, 2009 9:23:52 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, May 13, 2009
New Digs in New Mexico
Posted by TTH Staff
by Brian Lovett, editor
I've stayed in some pretty offbeat places during turkey season.
But teepees in the mountains of New Mexico?

That's what I experienced this past week, when I joined some folks from Mossy Oak, UnderArmour and Browning/Winchester Repeating Arms to hunt Merriam's with Steve Jones and the crew from Backcountry Hunts in northern New Mexico.
Our retro camp was ready when we arrived May 4. However, with three hours of daylight remaining, no one stuck around to inspect the digs. We switched from travel clothing to camo and hit the parks and canyons of the surrounding mountains.

I joined veteran guide Charlie Cockerell at a small pasture across from camp. Within minutes, we had spotted two longbeards along the tree line.
Several gobbles, some tense silence and a 15-yard shot later, the hunting portion of my trip was finished. We soon learned that writer Joe Byers had also shot a gobbler minutes after we dropped him off.
The next three days, I got to play caller/observer while tagging along with other hunters. Did we get more turkeys? Sure, but the real highlights included numerous elk, pronghorns, mule deer and even a cinnamon-phase black bear.
Oh, and there were also snow-capped peaks and stunning mountain parks along the way.
Many folks say turkey hunting isn't always about killing a bird, and that was especially true in the mountains of New Mexico.
Wednesday, May 13, 2009 10:14:57 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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