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turkey
Our area is runnin rampant with wild turkey. Had a flock of em in the yard again this am. Do they eat chicken? My wife was freakin out this am that they were gonna attack our pet egg layer. She wanted me to start shootin em and cook one for easter tom.
I am not a hunter and know nothin about them. Question for the turkey hunters. I know they are hunted with shotgun and bow/ arrow, (no rifle hunting in MA) but If it were in season and I were a licensed hunter, could I drop a turkey with a pellet gun shot to the head? If I were gonna do it for real, is there a particular place you need to shoot them so as not to ruin the meat aside from blowin their head off? |
I have shot dozens of them with a shotgun. Always take a head shot as to not ruin the rest of the bird. A pellet gun? Hmmmm....not sure on that, I suppose it would work if you were close enough and a good shot.
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Order some guillotine arrows
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A casting egg and a big treble hook might be your best bet, then throw a blanket over it.:easy:
Just don't go bragging about it since it's not quite legal to go turkey snagging. |
Make sure you clean it in the kitchen, they smell like roses inside.
-spence |
i would buy a cheap bag of sunflower seed and spread it around
where ya want them to be..... they are easy to train like that |
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Just cause we live in a "Right to Farm Community", doesn't mean i need to be a farmer......... I like the fishin for turkey idea though......hmmmmmmmm |
the flock i had behind my house were like chickens
i'd see them out there and walk out throwing seed in a big broadcast sweep gesture and instead of retreating back up into the woods they'd run toward me hell bent for leather because they are addicted to sunflower seed there's those collapsible net traps ....bet they'd work |
Hunting : Throwing Stick, Bolas
Here are some more low-tech ideas. Though I think if primitive people had fishing rods they might have gone for the rod, casting egg and treble idea, sort of like a bolo with leverage. |
try following them
can't be done |
Pellet gun/head shot = dead turkey (or chipmunk, or squirrel, or woodchuck, etc....) every time. ...so I've heard
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Nothing beats a spring gobbler coming to the call in full strut! They deserve better than being eradicated like a common varmint. |
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if your pellet riffle shoots pellets at 1500 feet per second it'll go right on thru it's head....:uhuh: as for VARMITS .... varmit's destroy and eat your garden that you work so hard to create. One afternoon i was marveling on my row of onions that were just taking off bigtime all carefully mulched to conserve moisture so they'd grow big... they had reached that size where they'd double in size in a week next morning every single scallion onion was tore out and destroyed by a turkey.......... :wall: trying to eat my worms that i cultivate to make black soil and put in the garden.... SO THAT DEFINES VARMIT in my book i couldn't care if it has hair or feathers cause problems: i will defend myself and my property including my food garden |
I assume some VARMITS raised on nice garden vegetables make for a nice roaster?:)
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You would be very surprised what a .17 cal. pellet traveling at only 800 fps. can do during open season by a licenced hunter. I am a hunter and safely, quickly, and cleanly are always top priorities. Whether it is from one well placed pellet or from a pattern of a hundred or so.
I actually admire turkeys and love to listen to them gobble this time of year and do not actively hunt them. BUT, all of my neighbors are farmers and we all agree with Raven. He stated it perfectly. The only thing I would add is: A gobbler in full strut IS an awesome site. Just not on your porch waiting to trounce your 13 year old dog or chasing the neighbor’s kids. That makes him turkey pie in my book. |
Funny turkey story
we were up in the very top of Cuyamaca forest (cali) camping at our own risk because the area was basically closed for the season but we didn't care. So we had a great night with the campfire's and all that... and then came early morning listening to the sounds of nature in pure silence hard to find these days.... but we're on top of a mountain My wife is sleeping in not wanting to budge an inch out her sleeping bag. no early coffee or breakfast enticement could persuade her to get up. so then off in the distance we hear a Gobbler calling ever so faintly and i said to the others "i heard a turkey callin out thata way" pointing well it took about an hour or longer for the old turkey to get closer and closer and CLOSER to the camp with the gobbling getting louder by the minute everyone was thrilled with the sound of it and it was even starting to echo a bit finally as i see the turkey entering our camping area from inside the tent and i said to my wife...."wake up hon" and check out the tom turkey out here" she sits up real fast and yells at the top of her lungs in a mean way "YOU GET THE HELL OUTTA HERE YOU DAMN TURKEY !!!! the turkey takes off all startled.... and i said, "did ya hear it gobblin" she says, "yeah! for the last F-ing hour he's been keepin me awake" and with that over .........and she went back to sleep everyone started laughin real good or um "quietly" |
I have killed big groundhogs with a .22 pellet gun with one shot, it can be done. That said turkey have very keen vision and getting close for a shot is going to be tough, especially one the birds get wary. Keep in mind you will need a turkey permit. Basspro sells a .22 cal Beeman with a scope for 99 buck that is the one I have been using.
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My wife agrees with yours. The window on her side of the bed gets slammed shut at 0500 every morning when the gobblers start, now till the end of june. Then it's the cat bird that perches 10 feet from our pillows. I love it, her ...not so much.
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i had a tom here i was trying to train....
but i think someone might have shot him.... haven't seen him this year |
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this one knows what the yellow bucket means....
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shove them into a big ole funnel that's pointed down at a 45 degree angle
and snip the head off with pruning sheers into the yellow bucket :) |
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and if your ALONE? then what? |
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