Story
of the Hunt
The Swamp Gobbler - By Andrew Lewand
On May 6th, I ventured
to a local farm in pursuit of another
New York State long beard. In years
past, I'd taken a couple of Jakes off
the farm, but had taken no mature birds
there. On this day, I went in "blind"
(no prior scouting) and set up along
a field edge with a swamp/hardwoods
nearby. My hope faded as no gobbles
were heard. I did manage to hear one
lone gobble. However, he was too far
way as I had neither the time nor permission
to pursue that bird.
At 6:00 AM, I figured
I might as well start calling. I cranked
up the Primos Power Crystal and immediately
three hens appeared out of the woods.
They came right to me. I thought it
strange that no Toms were in tow and
decided to re-visit this farm in a week
or so to see if any Toms would move
in.
On May 19th, I set up
against the same tree as in my previous
outing. I was almost shocked when a
gobbler sounded off within 100 yards.
He flew down early and I could tell
by the sound of his gobbles that he
was going away through the swamp. "I've
got to relocate" I thought and quickly
circled way around the bird. The swamp
was a mess due to the recent ice storm,
as downed trees were everywhere. I did
my best to find a set up position. The
resident crows were my best friends
at this point for when they cawed, the
gobbler would respond with a healthy
gobble. I was able to gage his position
and picked a tree to set against.
I figured the bird to
be 100 yards away and yelped aggressively
with my mouth diaphragm call. My heart
raced as he answered my yelps. As his
gobbles sounded closer and closer, my
heart pounded! "I'm gonna get him" I
thought to myself. There was shooting
lane in the swamp and he was coming
right to it. Somehow, his gobbling was
beyond this opening. "What happened?"
I pondered. Suddenly, I could see his
white head behind a blow-down. It was
now or never! His head was the only
part of him in the Simmons Pro Diamond
scope. The Remington 870 scored again!
I splashed my way over to a pristine
gobbler 30 yards away.
What a beautiful specimen...
vibrant colors, a perfect full fan,
sharp 1+ spurs and 2 beards! My first
thought was... " I must get this bird
mounted". I took extra care in carrying
the trophy one mile back to the truck.
Even though my adrenaline was high,
he seemed to weigh 25 pounds (my scale
would show 20 pounds, oh well) as I
lugged him across the endless field.
As I approached the truck, the landowner
happened by and I was excited to show
him the bird. A phone call to Jimmy
Gall, at Beikirch's Ammunition, solidified
my desire to have this bird mounted.
To me, a full mount is a fitting tribute
to a turkey that gave such a memorable
morning!