Beginner's Luck
The turkey population in this immediate
area of New York is not great. Long
winters with plenty of snow and cold
weather take their toll but there are
a few. Last year there seemed to be
more than usual so I decided at the
last minute to try my luck. Of course
it turned out to be not so good (didn’t
even hear a gobble). It was probably
because of me not knowing what I was
doing. I gave it up to a lost cause.
This year I got inspired all over
again. A good friend of mine, Joe, gave
me a real nice deluxe turkey vest and
got me going again. Having picked his
knowledge of hunting along with another
friend, Dick, and their advice of what
I needed, I had all my turkey gear ready
by the first of February. The month
of April I was out scouting areas for
possible hunts; woods type hunts in
this area and field type hunting in
the Champlain valley. (a 75 minute drive).
The weather didn’t sound good for
opening day. Rain and thunderstorms
were predicted for the first two days.
I was up at 4 am on opening day and
it was raining but not a washout so
I decided to give it a try anyway. I
had a half hour drive to my first location
I was going to hunt and the weather
could be better there.
When I arrived it was a steady drizzle
but I parked and went about the skid
roads with the owl hooter but couldn’t
roost any birds and the was rain coming
down harder now so I decided to proceed
to the next area I had picked out.
When I arrived the rain was still
coming down pretty good so I waited
in the vehicle for a bit. A little after
day light the rain stopped so I headed
up the hill to the power line. I had
been here a couple days ago and got
a gobbler to talk to me.
Reaching the power line I yelped on
the box call and got a gobble 3 or 4
hundred yards away. I walked to the
high point ahead of me. It was downhill
on three sides of me now. I tried the
box call again he gobbled and was just
below me in the woods. If it was the
same bird he was coming fast. The power
line was on a hillside following the
contours and I was on the downhill side
of the right of way. I needed to be
on the uphill side. I had a hen decoy
but no time to set it up. I was not
ready for such fast action.
While fumbling trying to get the face
mask and gloves on, I heard a hen call
to my left. I suspected another hunter
and he was going to get my bird! The
hen call continued and the tom kept
gobbling. When I finally got my mask
and gloves on I looked up and two toms
were right in front of me at 30 yards
skirting between the sparse 4 foot pine
trees. When they got behind one I got
the gun up and the first one out got
the load of copper plated 6’s from a
3" magnum. The bird went down and the
other flew into a nearby white pine.
While making out the tag the hen was
still calling and I could see her running
around in the woods. The other tom flew
down and started gobbling again. By
the time I made the 10 minute walk back
to the truck it was raining pretty good
again. Twenty minutes time and I bagged
my first tom with a 9 1/4 inch beard
and 7/8 inch spurs.
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