By Brett Kiser
Jay Hill and Brett Kiser took these
two 4-wheeling Toms on opening morning.
Jay got his Kawasaki Prairie 4-wheeler
just in time for turkey season! He pulls
a nice tilting trailer behind his Chevy
pickup for quick unloading. Now, we
spend more time hunting the ridges than
we did walking to the ridges.
When we arrived, we heard a couple
of gobbles while it was still dark,
but about 20 minutes before daylight
there was a symphony of gobblers! They
sounded off from every nearby ridge.
My heart was pounding.
Jay, on the left in the picture, took
his turkey about 10 am. He said his
gobbler showed up wearing a blindfold
and smoking a cigarette. That Undertaker
Choke tube was the reason, I suppose.
Jay told me that we weren't planning
to catch and release this morning. The
birds took us seriously.
Brett (that's me on the right) coaxed
this lonely bird up the hill at about
11 a.m. with a diaphragm call. It pays
to hunt as you walk. Moving very slowly,
stopping and looking as I went, I was
practically counting trees as I carefully
approached the trail to the left that
led down the ridge. To the right of
the ridge trail was a huge hollow where
I had spooked a number of hens earlier
that morning. As I cut my eyes to the
left I spotted a black looking gobbler
with a swinging beard about 80 yards
away down the trail. I froze in my tracks.
He had not seen me. The weather was
wet from a steady rain all morning and
the Tom was ruffling his feathers and
shaking off the water. It had just stopped
raining. I saw the gobbler stretch out
his neck and gobble but I couldn't hear
him with the ground damp and the wind
blowing. I could read his lips. He seemed
to be looking for hens and they were
no where in sight. He turned slightly
and moved his head behind a tree.
I took advantage of the opportunity
and I single-stepped to my left towards
a cedar fence line. One more step at
the right moment put me out his sight.
I quickly found myself under the branches
of a cedar tree and assumed the ready
position. My optic green in the back
and red in the front sights were now
pointed toward an open spot 35 yards
away where I thought he would appear.
I let a few soft yelps slip form my
H. S. Cutting 2.5. The Tom closed the
distance in about 20 seconds!
When he appeared his neck was red to
the top of his head. He was frantically
looking and searching for his sweetie.
His eyes looked as big as saucers! Winchester
Supreme Double XX # 5's took him down
hard from my Mossberg 500, XX-full .670
choke.
I called Jay on my Motorola Talkabout
250 walkie talkie (he was back at the
truck with his bird). He picked me up
and we headed to the house. It was a
great opening day hunt and we are having
TOO MUCH FUN!!
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