On Saturday May 10, 2003, my second
day afield, I was sitting with my dad
and grandfather at 4:15 a.m. in my blind
with 3 hen decoys and a jake out in
front. I anxiously awaited for sunrise
so we could start our fly down calls
and simulated landings with my hand
wing. Upon our first call we were answered
with a gobble in the distance which
had me all excited. We called again
and heard in the distance a second gobble.
We realized this was going to be a difficult
bird to draw in.
After several more calls and almost
an hour gone by, there was still no
sight or sound of a bird. We decided
to walk a couple hundred yards and give
a good yelp of which we heard a gobble.
We quickly got back to the blind and
tried to work him. Again there were
no more responses and it was beginning
to get windy.
Around 7:00 a.m. my dad went upwind
of our blind about 100 yards and let
out a yelp and instantly a gobble was
heard. Another yelp another gobble...another
yelp another gobble, we knew we had
an interested bird. We quickly went
back to our blind and decoys and picked
up for a new set. We started to sneak
through the woods to an adjacent field
and carefully glassed the field and
about 250 yards up was a big turkey
just staring down towards our direction.
We gave him a call and he gobbled.
We went back about 75 yards on a small
road that led to a small field next
to the big field we just spotted him
in. We set the blind and 3 hen decoys
(we didn't set the jake because we weren't
sure if the turkey we saw was a jake
and didn't want to intimidate him).
We immediately starting yelping with
the box call and he gobbled the full
distance to every yelp we made. He was
getting louder and was evident he was
going to come down the little road.
He eventually popped up on a rock wall
to my right and gobbled and displayed
his fan. I could not shoot due to the
brush obstruction but I had my gun up
and ready to shoot when the target was
right.
My dad started using the plunger call
with a few little contented purrs and
he started gobbling and getting closer...he
was hissing and spitting while fanning
and strutting. He then started his move
to get closer to the decoys. It was
obvious he saw the decoys and was frustrated
that they wouldn't respond to his full
display. He started ever so cautiously
(which seemed like an eternity) to make
his final approach.
I knew the next time he extended his
neck and gobbled I was going to pull
the trigger. Earlier my grandfather
said he would buy me an ice-cream if
I shot a turkey that day. Well, as I
was about to take my last deep breath
to shoot, I mouthed in a faint whisper
"Ice-cream, ice-cream". The
bead was on the base of his neck and
as he gobbled all we heard was the crack
of my 3" magnum sounding off .
I had my first turkey at 12 years old.
It took almost 45 minutes to the final
14 yards before I got my prize.
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