Our ultimate guide to turkey hunting will help you get in the gobbler game
The post How to Turkey Hunt appeared first on Outdoor Life.
Few things in hunting rival the excitement of a tom turkey’s thundering gobble from the limb before first light. When that gobbler finally struts into range and you make a perfect shot, you will have acco*plished one of the greatest and most thrilling hunts in America. Plus, you’ll have a whole bunch of delicious wild turkey meat to bring home.
But leaving the woods with a longbeard draped over your shoulder requires specific skills, knowledge, and plenty of patience. To be successful, you’ll need a basic understanding of turkey behavior and calling, along with a few pieces of crucial gear. We’re here to help. In this ultimate guide on how to turkey hunt, we’ll cover:
For the most part, turkey numbers are strong and you can chase them almost anywhere in the lower 48. co*pared to most big game hunts, turkey hunting is relatively affordable. If you’re new to hunting in general, turkey hunting provides a thrilling and accessible way into the sport. Here’s how to get started.
Turkeys thrive in diverse habitats all across the country, but they do require a few key habitat ingredients. First and foremost, turkeys require trees for roosting. Think old-growth hardwood, pine forests, or giant cottonwoods in open country. Turkeys like to feed in open areas during the day: agricultural fields, meadows rich with bugs, and clear-cuts shooting up new growth. Lastly, turkeys need thick, grassy areas for nesting cover.
Search your state’s website and you’ll likely find a distribution map for turkeys. Once you have a general understanding of where turkeys live, you’ve got to find a place to hunt them. That breaks down to either private or public land.
For new turkey hunters, getting access to private land is the perfect training ground, especially if you’re the only one hunting it. You might have neighbors, friends, or family with prime turkey habitat, which is where you should start first. The larger the property, the better. This will give you (and the turkeys) plenty of space to roam, but any spot is better than none.
You can also go the paid route by leasing ground from an individual or timber co*panies, but this can get expensive. Joining a local hunting club or camp is another option.
If you can’t get access to private hunting ground, there are still plenty of opportunities on public land. It’ll just require a little extra scouting and legwork to avoid other hunters. You’ll need to check your local hunting regulations, but most of the following land designations allow turkey hunting:
There are also many private lands that allow public hunting access:
GPS mapping systems like OnX or Huntstand can help you locate potential hunting spots (read our guide to hunting public land turkeys here). Since you’ll be co*peting with other hunters, look for areas on a map with a variety of terrain features that aren’t easy to access. This includes areas that are far from parking, areas that require crossing a stream or wetlands, or areas on the backside of steep ridges. These natural barriers will keep out many other hunters. Look for open timber that borders private agricultural fields or pasture land that’s located at least half a mile or more from a trail or road. Find these spots and you can usually find turkeys. Spend as much time scouting before the season as you can, and read our guide on how to scout for turkeys.
We might be living in the golden age of turkey hunting media right now. By that I mean there’s a ton of free content out there that can help teach you how to turkey hunt. Not all of this content is created equally, so here’s a curated list of podcasts, videos, and social media pages that are legit.
Calling podcast episode: Matt Van Cise on the Outdoor Life podcast. Listen to the winningest turkey caller in history give some in-depth pot calling tips.
Podcast: The Spring Legion. An in-depth podcast series that’s all about turkey hunting.
YouTube: Shane Simpson Hunting. Shane Simpson is an elite caller and expert turkey hunter who shares his hunts and tips.
YouTube: The Hunting Public. Nobody hunts public-land turkeys harder, or has more fun doing it, than the THP crew.
Instagram: The The Wild Turkey Doc. No one is better at sharing information about the wild turkey than turkey researcher Mike Chamberlain.
Because spring turkey hunting seasons coincide with turkey breeding season, hunting tactics revolve around calling in male turkeys (toms) with female turkey (hens) noises. Toms gobble and strut to entice receptive hens. This dance drives the main activity in spring turkey hunting.
READ NEXT: Turkey Vision: Here’s What Hunters Should Know About How Wild Turkeys See
Toms are adult male turkeys. They have full tail fans and long beards (typically 8 inches or longer). They are also larger in body size (usually 15 to 25 pounds).
Jakes are subadult male turkeys. Their tail fans will typically have some shorter feathers with longer feathers in the middle. They will have shorter beards and smaller body size than toms. Some states allow you to shoot jakes during spring seasons while others do not.
Hens are female turkeys. They typically have no beards (bearded hens are rare but do occur). Hunters are prohibited from shooting hens during spring hunting seasons with the exception that some states allow the harvest of bearded hens.
Turkeys fly up to roost at sunset and fly down sometime around sunrise. Between those two events, turkeys are looking for other turkeys or feed, or they’re trying to breed. They use vocalizations and their excellent eyesight to locate other turkeys.
All turkeys roost during the night. Ridge tops, creek bottoms, field edges, and isolated woodlots make great roosting sites. During inclement weather, turkeys will roost in more protected areas.
Gobbling is a tom’s deep, raspy calling card and the main reason they’re so exciting to hunt. Toms use this rapid rolling vocalization to locate nearby hens. Gobbling frequency varies widely depending on the number of hens in the area and hunting pressure.
To attract hens and establish dominance, gobblers will strut and show off their plumage. Strutting will sometimes draw in another gobbler as a challenger.
Besides gobbles, spitting and drumming are the other co*mon sounds gobblers make. Spitting literally sounds like someone aggressively spitting. If you can hear this sound, get ready, because it means a gobbler is close. Drumming sounds like a low, quiet drum rumbling in the woods. You feel a tom drumming in your chest more than you actually hear it.
The female turkey dictates tom behavior and can make or break your hunt. When hens are ready to breed, prying a gobbler away from them is a real challenge. Hens call to locate gobblers and each other with a variety of vocalizations.
Turkeys aren’t the heaviest animals, so don’t expect to find a copious amounts of tracks when you’re scouting the woods. Tracks will tell you where a turkey has been, but other sign such as dust bowls or drag marks can tell you where they prefer to spend the most time.
Turkeys have three toes, and at first glance it can be difficult to know if you’re looking at a gobbler or hen track. Gobblers make larger tracks, and their middle toe is noticeably longer than the other two. Hen tracks run smaller, and all three toes are typically similar in length. A single track might not mean you’ve stumbled on a prime setup, but areas littered with both hen and gobbler tracks might be worth a sit.
Look for turkey droppings in obvious areas like scratch sites, bare ground, or dirt roads. Gobblers have long j-shaped droppings, while hens have round, clustered droppings. If you find several piles in ideal roosting sites, make a note and plan to give that spot a listen from a distance.
Like tracks, feathers will tell you where a turkey has been. One feather might not tell you much, but if you notice multiple, and the area looks like great roosting habitat, it probably is.
Turkeys “scratch” or rake back leaves to expose bare ground and feed on insects or mast. These spots look like miniature deer scrapes, scattered randomly in a given area where turkeys have been feeding. If they’re fresh enough, you can see marks where their feet raked through the dirt.
A lot of the same terrain features that make great roosting sites also make excellent strut zones. These are easier to identify in field edges by glassing them from a distance. They can also be great ambush sites for henned-up or unresponsive gobblers. On dry, sandy, or muddy ground, gobblers will leave thin parallel lines where their wing tips drag the ground while they strut. While he might not strut in that spot every day, it’s probably an area he tends to frequent.
Turkeys “bathe” by rolling or crouching in dirt patches to coat their wings and maintain their plumage. This also helps them get rid of parasites or biting insects. Dusting sites look like small, round indentations or bowls in the dirt that usually have turkey feathers in them.
Turkey hunting is an auditory sport; you’ll use your ears as much as your eyes. You’ll learn to hear gobblers from a distance and pinpoint their location. You’ll sneak closer to those toms and then call them into range. But first you need to learn how to call, and for that you’ll need a turkey call.
There are plenty of options when it co*es to turkey calls. At the beginning, focus on producing consistent, crisp yelps. Using a box call is the easiest and quickest way to get started. Get co*fortable and proficient with one call, and then add more later. The main types of turkey calls include the following.
Beco*ing an efficient turkey caller requires years of practice, trial and error, and lots of time spent listening to live turkeys. Practice your calling well before the season at any chance you get. Carry a mouth call in your pocket and practice on your work co*mute.
Calling videos on Youtube will help you learn, but the real trick is to spend a lot of the time in the woods talking to turkeys. This is the general process.
Before you make the first call, you want to locate a turkey. Ideally, you’ll do this the evening before you hunt. Listen for turkeys from a distance: They’ll usually gobble once or twice after they fly up. If the turkeys aren’t gobbling on their own, you’ll want to use a locator call to shock them into gobbling. When you hear turkeys on the roost, plan to setup in that area the next morning.
If you aren’t able to roost a tom the evening before, don’t sweat it. Plan to be in the woods at least 30 minutes before daylight within listening range of where you think turkeys might be roosted. That way, you’re still in earshot of a gobbler and you can adjust your setup on the fly.
You want to set up as close as you can to a gobbling tom without bumping him. In open woods this might be 200 yards away or more. In thicker cover you might be able to slip inside 100 yards. On your first few turkeys it makes sense to err on the side of caution and set up farther away from the bird. Pick an area that gives you a good shooting lane, with at least 40 yards of open woods or field. Sit with your back to a tree that is at least as wide as your shoulders (to break up your profile). Rest your shotgun on your knee pointing in the direction you expect the turkey to co*e from. Now you can begin calling.
Half of turkey calling is about sounding realistic and the other half is about reading a tom’s attitude. An unpressured, lonely tom will gobble often and be receptive to more aggressive calling. But if you’re targeting a tom that has already been pressured by other hunters, a few soft clucks and purrs will likely be more effective. No two gobblers respond the same, so expect each encounter to require a slightly different calling strategy.
Most new hunters call too often. You want to pique a gobbler’s interest, and then get him to co*e looking for you. This takes patience. If a gobbler is occasionally responding to your call’s, it’s tempting to call more and more. Instead, you should probably ease off the call and wait. It could take an hour or more for a gobbler to decide to co*e into range, and when he does, he’ll likely co*e in silently.
On the flip side, some gobblers will respond to your calls and charge in hot. Call aggressively for these birds, then immediately go quiet and get ready for a shot.
Knowing when and how much to call is a delicate balance, and you’ll get it wrong before you get it right. More encounters in the field will help you find the right rhythm. Pay close attention to how a turkey is responding to you, and try to tell him what he wants to hear.
There are two general approaches you can take to calling: running and gunning, or sitting and waiting. For run-and-gun hunting, you’ll cover ground, stop to call on occasion, and hope to strike a bird. But even this strategy takes a lot of patience. You’re not literally running through the woods. You walk very slowly and stop at likely spots to set up and call. Give each setup at least an hour of waiting and occasional calling before moving to a different spot. The call-and-wait strategy is more simple. Set up in a spot where you’ve seen turkeys or where there’s a lot of turkey sign, and then simply wait until a tom arrives. Call every 15 or 30 minutes or when you hear a gobbler. This strategy is usually best executed from a blind (because it’s more co*fortable and it conceals you better). Both strategies co*e with pros and cons. Sitting and waiting is usually more productive for new hunters (because you’re less likely to bump turkeys), but it can get a little boring. Running and gunning is more engaging, but it requires a ton of trial and error to master.
Read Next: Turkey Calling Tips
When it co*es to gear, you can make turkey hunting as minimalist or maximalist as you want. At the minimum, you’ll need some camo clothing, a shotgun that will shoot a tight pattern, ammo, and a call. Beyond that, you can invest in gear that makes your hunting more co*fortable and efficient. Check out my essential guide to turkey hunting gear here. But the essentials include:
Hunters killed plenty of longbeards before turkey-specific shotguns and TSS turkey loads became popular. But the advent of that technology has (theoretically) made turkey hunting more efficient and accurate. If you already have a shotgun, it’s probably just fine for hunting turkeys. Run a full choke, use quality turkey loads, and make sure to shoot within your effective range (more on this later). But if you’re looking for a specific turkey hunting gun, here are a few things to consider.
Once you’ve got your gun and ammo, it’s time to pattern your setup. This means shooting your gun at a target to evaluate its point-of-impact and pattern density (how many pellet strikes) at a given range. If you’re using a sight, start close—about 15 yards or so—and shoot a paper target. You want the core of your pattern to cover the bullseye. Adjust your sights as needed. If you’re shooting a bead, shoot from about 30 yards to assess your point of impact. If the pattern evenly covers the bullseye, great. If not, you can change your point of impact by using your shotgun’s shim kit (assuming it has one). Or you can throw down for a red dot sight.
Once you’ve got point-of-impact nailed down, you’ll want to assess pattern density. This means counting the number of pellet strikes within a 10-inch circle. A good rule of thumb is that you want about 100 pellet strikes within the circle. Once you’re at a distance where you can no longer get about 100 hits inside the circle, you’ve identified your maximum effective range.
You want your pattern to strike the turkey in the neck and head. Aim for the point where his red wattles meet feathers on his neck. Avoid shooting at a turkey when he is in full strut since this decreases your chance of hitting him in the neck. Likewise, avoid shooting turkeys in the body, as this is likely to wound the bird. Read our full guide on where to shoot a turkey here.
Great turkey hunters understand turkey behavior and how to adapt throughout the season. But it takes years to really learn how to turkey hunt. Turkeys are highly instinctive animals. There’s often no logic behind what they do or why they do it. That’s in part what makes it so fun. You’ll have to hone your hunting instincts to be a successful turkey hunter.
Stick with it, and after several red-eyed spring hunting seasons you’ll find that the turkeys are actually calling you—and you’ll answer the call every time.
The post How to Turkey Hunt appeared first on Outdoor Life.
[/html]