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[ 7 posts ] |
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Success, failure, and one disappointed young man!
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shopson
Longbeard
Joined: Fri Dec 10, 2004 8:00 pm Posts: 204 Location: Greeneville Tenn
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Success, failure, and one disappointed young man!
Me and my son went back Saturday morning and set up in the same place he got his a week ago. Daylight was breaking and bam! Less than 125 yards away. I told him then that I bet that was the one we were after. Sure enough a steady stream of hens started making there way in. On the ground, he would rarely gobble, but I would cutt at him now and then just to check on his where abouts. They stayed in a 100 yard square taking care of business, hens coming and going, til about 9:30. Finally they started moving up a fenceline. We made a move and got in there where they had been all morning, but I never got him to gobble again.
My yard was knee high in grass so I had to go home and mow. Michael thought we had spooked the gobbler but I convinced him we hadn't and told him if he wanted to stay and hunt that I would come pick him up later. He did, so I set the dekes back up where we were all morning and left him on his own for the first ime turkey hunting. I left him at 10:45.
At 12:00 he hears a gobble to his right. He whips out his Aluminater and gives them a series of calls and gets ready. In no time two red heads pop up in the field like periscopes. They start making their way towards the dekes, but won't seperate enough to give him a shot at just one. They finally seperate enough to give him a shot, but he has followed them so far that he is twisted out of position, and they are so close, 15 yards, that he just misses when he shoots.. He said they were two big longbeards.
None the less, I am proud od him for calling in his first two longbeards while actually hunting, and even more proud of him for waiting on the birds to seperate before taking the shot, even if he did pass up his best shots and missed.
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Sun Apr 17, 2005 10:17 pm |
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Dale
King of Spring
Joined: Sat Dec 04, 2004 9:27 am Posts: 1907 Location: Roanoke, VA
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Sounds like you have provided the makings of a fine turkey hunter. Many leasons to come!
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Mon Apr 18, 2005 8:23 am |
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Gobblenow
Co-Owner/Dog Feeder
Joined: Mon Dec 06, 2004 10:20 am Posts: 3796
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been there...that close the pattern probably looks like one of those baseballs michael can make disappear in right field...hahaha
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Mon Apr 18, 2005 9:33 am |
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Charliedog
2 Year Old
Joined: Mon Dec 20, 2004 5:01 pm Posts: 96 Location: Crozet, VA
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You ought to be proud. Proud of yourself too. He obviously has a good teacher.
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Mon Apr 18, 2005 10:02 am |
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FlatLand Gobbler
King of Spring
Joined: Mon Dec 06, 2004 8:46 am Posts: 753 Location: Hampton, VA.
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I wish all Turkey hunters were that ethical. Good Job
_________________ Ron
"Turkey hunting, when you knock all the feathers off it, is a game of infinite variables, played on a field of unlimited dimension, against an opponent who doesn't know the rules and wouldn't play by them if he did." ...Jim Spencer
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Mon Apr 18, 2005 11:43 am |
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Econo
King of Spring
Joined: Thu Dec 16, 2004 10:09 pm Posts: 2070 Location: Buena Vista, Va.
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Even if he didn't bring home the bird, sounds like he still had a great hunt. He brought home something else, CONFIDENTS in calling up those long beards. GOOD JOB
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Mon Apr 18, 2005 8:17 pm |
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Mhopson
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Thanks for all the congrats... I do have a great teacher. It was a huge confidenc ebulder to call them in but it was a empty feeling after the miss.
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Tue Apr 19, 2005 7:46 pm |
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