Story
of the Hunt
It was the day before
Easter and a pleasant 53 degrees outside.
A year earlier I had killed a 24 pounder
in the same area I planned on hunting
today. I left the house about 4:45 AM
to go turkey hunting. It was my fourth
time out this year. I walked into the
woods, close to where the birds were
roosted the morning before. Walking
in was quiet as it had rained the night
before.
The turkeys were roosting
in trees right on the river's edge so
I set up nearby. I put out my decoys
in an opening by the river bank. Then
I quietly stepped off 40 paces and put
up my blind. I sat down waiting for
the toms to start gobbling at daybreak.
It seemed like forever, but I didn't
have to wait long. They started gobbling
at the first crow call around 5:45.
It sounded like the birds
were about 300 yards away. That is when
I thought maybe I should move closer,
but something told me to stick it out.
I began calling softly with every call
in my bag trying to make the toms think
there was a bunch of new hens up river.
Almost 20 minutes had passed when much
to my surprise, a tom up in a tree just
across the river from me gobbled. He
liked to scared me to death. Not knowing
he was anywhere around I turned down
my calling to low-low. I purred and
soft clucked and he would gobble right
back. This was great.
The days before this one
the turkeys would always fly down and
go quiet. It seemed they knew I was
there and would go the other direction.
But to my surprise the tom flew down
right in the middle of my decoys. He
went to full strut and was headed toward
the jake decoy. I think he was fixing
to kick his butt.
I quickly checked my watch
for legal shooting time. Two minutes
into season and I let my No.5's go.
My shot was true and my turkey was down,
but he started flopping around. My leg
had gone to sleep and I was having trouble
getting up. Much to my disbelief he
flopped right over the bank and into
the river. My heart sank as I watched
my bird float down the river.
After a hour or so of
searching, I thought my tom was gone
forever. I walked around another bend
in the river and found my turkey wedged
up in a log-jam. Almost a mile and a
half down river.
I hurried back home and
called my brother. When he arrived at
my house I told him about what had happened.
We started putting together stuff to
be able to reach out 30' into the river.
It took about a half hour and half a
roll of duck tape, but we had a crude
looking fishing pole. We loaded up our
fishing gear and headed for the log-jam.
The bank of the river
was so steep we had to shovel steps
down to the edge. It took a lot of tries,
but we finally fished my tom out of
the river. My turkey weighed 36 lbs.
wet. After it dried out it weighed 25
lbs., it had a 9 1/2" beard, and
had 1" spurs. With my big brother's
help and the grace of God the tom was
mine. It was a prize to behold, but
the next time I would rather not have
to go Turkey Fishing.