Friday, November 27, 2015

Turkey Hunting, in the Rain, with a Twelve Year Old. Part 3





“Still having fun even with the missed opportunities?”

“Yup. Dad, I can’t wait to actually take a good shot at a turkey. Think we’ll get one here?”

Nathan still had enthusiasm in his voice. My overriding fear has been projecting my desires upon his hunts.  Without the ability to echo locate birds by calling and getting a gobbling response, chasing turkeys in the fall requires so much more effort then in spring. Bumping the flock more then once has typically changed their habits; habits I’ve spent the past few months figuring out. The operative word is “I,” and admittedly, there is a conflict between wanting to keep the birds for myself and sharing them with Nathan knowing he might not be patient enough to put himself close enough for a shot. Fortunately, my selfish thoughts only pass through and don’t stick around..

Expecting an enthusiastic 12 year old boys to be able to sit still for an hour, not drag his feet through the dry leaves, or truly understand how difficult it is to put the birds in front of him, is unrealistic. So what if he gets busted. If he learns how to move with stealth and good woodsmanship while enjoying the outdoors does scaring off a flock of turkeys really matter in the grand scheme of things? Not at all. He is out in the woods and not sitting around at home.

The farm road skirts the edge of the pasture and is defined by an electric fence and the woodsline. Sometimes there are cattle in the fields making the stalking a bit of a challenge. Seems turkeys don’t really like the company of cows.

“Hard to say unless we go take a look. If they are here we can sneak around and get a shot. We just need to be careful popping up over the lip of the field.”

This plot of land borders the Connecticut River and is supposedly the bottom of ancient Lake Hitchcock, an Ice Age lake which abruptly drained 10,000-12,000 years ago. This rapid draining left the steep ravines and convoluted topography we hope to exploit when sneaking up on a flock. Many of these ravines are covered by open hardwoods and capped by extremely flat terraces which have been cleared for farming and grazing. A fortunate byproduct of this terrain is fantastic turkey habitat.

The cow pasture and terraces are separated by a creek just large enough to keep the cattle from wandering randomly between the high ground and the lower pastures. With the cows down low the turkeys should have no fear and inhabit the fields above.

Climbing the dirt ramp in the rain is quiet except for the increasing sound of our breathing. Approaching the lip we drop to hands and knees finishing the ascent by crawling towards the base of the honey suckle. Looking through the brush we don’t need the binos to pick out three flocks of birds. One about 200 yards directly in front of us; another sunning themselves under an apple tree 300 yards to the west; the last bunch is spread out among the old stone walls and scrub brush dotting the hills to the north and too far away to consider chasing.

The birds straight away begin disappearing over the far bank. My watch says 1:20 PM. In the event we are busted by the apple tree gang, there is a good chance this group will be available in the coming days.

            Nathan grabs the binos and slides beneath the brush propping himself up on his elbows laying prone to keep out of sight.

            “There’s a bunch of hens and a few toothbrush toms. They’re just hanging out pecking at stuff. There are a few of them wandering off to the right.”

            “What do you ant to do? Watch a bit more or try to get set up on them?”

            “Let’s move and try to get to the pine trees.”

            Nathan slides back through the brush and hands me the binos. We drop back to the creek and move along the floodplain towards the head of this small valley. Nathan scrambles up the bank to see if the flock has moved.

            Approaching the crest of the slope, Nathan crouches behind the ragweed lining the border between the trees and the field. He stands peering over the vegetation and suddenly drops to his knees. He look down at me and rapidly points up the hill.

            Without making a sound my mouth moves, ”What?”

            Nathan mouths back and points up the hill, “They’re right there.”

            Now in full pantomime we communicate for him to keep moving to the right and try to get around the pine trees at the bend in the field, set up and wait. The wet ground helps him move with a bit of stealth but his need to keep an eye on the birds increases the chance of him getting busted. If he does, he does and with a bit of self-convincing I’m okay with whatever happens.

            I reach the trees before Nathan and we set-up on the back side of an overgrown pasture pine. The flock should be on our left, walk past the trees and away from our position while providing a chance to draw the bows and get a shot.

            The clucking and yelping to our left grows louder as the birds close the distance. To the right, we begin to hear the moooo of cows. The clucks grow louder as does the mooing. The cows down in the  creek bottoms become visible though the trees; the turkeys are abeam of our tree and 40 yards out. They stop, perriscoping their necks to scan the area. Nathan and I don’t breathe to keep any motion to a minimum. When the large black cow steps into the field the turkeys turn and move across the field and are no longer a valid target.

            Nathan lowers his bow and whispers,” Dad, we were busted by cows! That’s so un-cool. Coyotes or bobcats or something considered a predator is one thing but cows? “

            “A first for me too. Let’s sit here for a few moments and let the birds run from the big scary cows before we scoot back down the hill. We should head home. I’m pretty tired.”

            “Sounds good.”

            Watching the turkeys hustle away from the approaching herd of cows really is amusing. The flock stops at the treeline before melting into the weeds and disappearing. Nathan and I get up and begin the 10 minute walk back to the car. We decide to head across the creek bottom and take a direct route to the road to avoid mixing with the herd of cows, and a few bulls, still on the other side of the creek. 

            The slope is open pines with a carpet of fallen needles to absorb each footfall so we move with almost no sound. YELP, YELP, YELP; a hen begins to call together the flock which must have scattered when the cows moved through to head up the hill and subsequently scare off the birds we were on. Tilting my head and pointing my thumb to the right indicating a move to the large bull pine where the slope meets the flat puts us near the closest cover.

            The kee-kee-kee and sharp clucks allow echolocation of the flock’s assembly point. “You see ‘em?” I whisper pointing towards the slope across the flats.

            “No. They sound like they might be on the other side of the creek.” Nathan replies.

            Our current position is pretty good and a successful kill will require the birds to move across the flats and up the hill towards the fields behind us. There is a small clump of brush in the flats but the risk of getting busted is too great so we sit still and listen to the calls which come for out in front of us. The sounds are becoming less frantic and beginning to coalesce within a small oak grove 150 yards away. The flock is back together but appears very paranoid. There is no pecking at the ground or wing flapping. The birds are very still and their head movements are small as they scan the surroundings for predators and latecomers to the assembly.



            When the flock starts purring and the clucking loses a bit of the sharp edge we count eleven hens and one soul patch jake in the mix. Soon the turkeys seem much more relaxed as they begin pecking at the ground, scratching, with much less examining of the surroundings. The creek flat by the oaks is devoid of understory and the birds begin moving towards the fields up high which unfortunately, is away from us. We’ve been sitting for almost forty-five minutes so the knobby forest floor has created a few numb and sore spots on both mine and Nathan’s butts.

            “You want to try and end run those birds and get up the hill ahead of ‘em?” My tone of voice is apathetic.

            “Nah. We’ve been going pretty hard all day and I’m kinda cold and hungry. It was pretty fun hearing those birds calling and we didn’t get busted. There’s always tomorrow and we know where they are and there’s a ton of turkeys in here.”

            When the flock moves out of sight we stand up and brush the pine needles off our pants. Good boots have us walking right through the creek and across the swampy areas which drain into the floodplain. Cows stop eating and turn to watch us stroll across the pasture, jump the barbed wire fence and move along the road to the car.

            Nathan and I encountered a lot of turkeys, heard some awesome calling; and learned a huge amount about the habits of flocks in the rain. No we didn’t get off a shot but watching my son made this one of the best hunting days I’ve ever had.

           

Friday, November 13, 2015

Turkey Hunting, in the Rain, with a Twelve Year Old. Part 2




Nathan grabbed a hot shower while the old man, me, dug through the refrigerator for lunch. When the tea kettle came to a full boil the hot water filled mugs to bring the black tea steeping to full flavor.  As Nathan found dry clothes, I finished cutting the quesadillas.

The food didn’t last too long or even grace our tongues; we ate fast, dressed warm and headed back out looking for birds. The precip. was more of a drizzle then steady rain. The wind picked up enough to push the small car from side-to-side. The narrow river valley opened up into freshly harvested cornfields bringing new hope to the dreary afternoon.

At this point in the season it is always tempting to fill a tag using the front bumper.

Heading south on route 5, Nathan examined the treeline along the far side of the fields. “No turkeys in there. We should head left and take a look in the Steve’s Rock Field.”

The name of the fields tend to be some reminder of some turkey hunting episode from prior seasons. This past spring, Nathan, Steve, and I slithered along a stonewall adjacent to a large hay field. The flock of hens was leading a few toms quartering away from the wall; the closest bird was maybe 35 yards away. A large boulder marks the end of the stonewall and Steve managed to ooze up and lay the 12 gauge Mossberg across the top without getting busted. BOOM! The sound of the first shot rolled across the valley as the knee high grasses absorbed the shot leaving a disturbance in the otherwise uniform fescue. Steve shucked the first shell and fired again at the running flock. Another miss and the only casualties being some vegitation.

Pulling into the farm road leading into Steve’s Rock the slight hollow near the corn held a flock of about twenty birds. After watching for a few minutes Nathan spoke up.“Let’s head to the rich guy’s place and cut across meadow into the trees. That looks the way they’re going.”

Three minutes later we pulled off the road, jumped into our rain suits, and grabbed our bows. The trees Nathan was referring to sat between the car and the birds. The edge of the field  is dense with honeysuckle and ragweed enabling us to move quite freely closing to within 100 yards of the turkeys. The wind and rain made enough noise to cover the sound of two humans walking in wet grass.

The crux move to getting up close is finding a way through the strip of trees and into the next field. The trees are filled with vines and dense underbrush making any progress difficult. Fortunately, the birds were still in the hollow so we had terrain working to shelter us as we fought between the saplings, and thorny brush. Nathan insisted on trying to sneak through the grass and get close; I made my way to the edge of the tree hoping he might spook them towards me.

A tom just cannot resist showing of for the ladies. caption

My position allowed a good view of both the flock and the boy. Nathan stopped to nock an arrow before crouching and moving on his knees. Fall birds are much more docile and orders of magnitude less paranoid compared to spring. I have no idea how he managed to do it. Ten minutes after beginning his frontal attack on the turkeys he was twenty yards away and still sheltered by the topography. He checked his release and squirmed around getting his feet beneath his legs. In one motion he stood and drew the bow bringing his release hand to anchor. I held my breath not wanting to spook the birds. Nate moved the bow from side to side. “Come on boy, shoot something.” Is all I could think.

HONK, HONK, HONK, mixed in with the yelping and clucking of turkeys. The sounds scattered and six Canada Geese flew away followed by the twenty turkeys. Nathan let down, turned and came towards me.

“What happened?”

“Dad, it was pretty cool. I was pretty nervous sneaking up there. I could hear them clucking, and yelping a bit. When I stood up I had no idea the geese were there too and I kinda freaked out not wanting to shoot a goose which were in front of the turkeys. I jumped when the geese began honking. It was loud. I didn’t want to, well I did but decided not to, take a shot as they flew away. Kinda sucks they got away.”

“Welcome to turkey hunting with a bow. At least you learned something about sneaking up on birds. I’d of thought for sure you’d get busted long before you did. You’re doing great. Hunting them with a bow is hard. Even if you don’t get one your getting well within shotgun range, right?”

 I carried Nathan’s bow while he folded the blades of his Muzzy broadhead on the walk back to the car.

The next set of fields was blank so we kept driving south. A small gang of toms with paintbrush beards sat out in the middle of a posted field. Another flock of hens occupied the space beneath a crab apple tree in someone’s front yard. It was good to see all the birds even if they were not accessible.

The destination fields are bordered by steep ravines, lively creeks with open woods and is one of my all time favorite places to spot and stalk turkeys. The rain stopped falling as we pulled off the road and a few bit of blue sky were visible through the clouds.  So far the day had been fantastic hunting and little did we know the best part of the day stood fifteen minutes in out future.

Good cover but too long a distance for a decent shot.





Stay tuned for part 3

Monday, November 2, 2015

Turkey Hunting, in the Rain, with a Twelve Year Old. Part 1





The Friday before Columbus Day weekend was an in-service day for the teachers and staff of Thetford Academy giving the students the day off. Rain pelted the tin roof while the heavy cloud cover kept the morning in perpetual dawn. Only large patches of any color could be distinguished in the paltry light. With a lack of a brightening day, my internal clock just stopped and only an overpowering need to relieve myself had the ability to force me out of bed. Rain shuts down the outdoor work of landscaping so my day was free to spend at home with the kids and maybe get in a bit of turkey hunting.

Nathan at full draw


Nathan, my twelve-year-old son, can finally pull enough draw weight on his compound bow to generate enough kinetic energy with an arrow to make turkey hunting an ethical pursuit. Shotgun season is still three weeks in the future and in defiance of the rain we suit up and head out the door.

A decade ago my 1985 Yamaha FJ 600 was sold off but I kept the rain suits since they kept me dry traveling through the wet at highway speeds. They should be just fine for stalking turkeys and two suits are stashed in the trunk of the car; one for me, the other for Nathan. If we’re dry we should be warm or at least not too cold.

Rain suits keep water at bay with a trade-off; the suits make similar sounds I recall from my days attending elementary school in the 70’s when corduroy was all the rage. With each step the wale of the material rode past each other producing a staccato, brrrrrip, brrrrip, brrrrrrip. Between classes at the height of corduroy mania the cacophony of walking students was pretty overwhelming. Now, wearing the rain suits, each step had the flared legs rubbing past each other making a whoosh, whoosh, whoosh just loud enough my hope is the rain in the trees will the sound of our movements.

The plan is to spot and stalk the local corn field which have just been cut.  Getting into a car to hunt turkeys is a bit of a bummer when the house is surrounded by fantastic terrain for hunting. Fantastic terrain for hunting vocal gobblers but not so great for locating the more silent birds of autumn.

Five minutes down the road we come to a lake. Not great hunting for turkeys but the valleys with streams and small rivers which drain into the lake provide farmers with rich soils for growing corn. Fresh cut corn usually means feeding turkeys and this morning is no different. Three toms, one toothbrush jake following two legitimate longbeards through the corn stubble. The undulations of the field provide topographic cover. Skulking through the rolling field we take a guess which way the gang will turn when it reaches the treeline. A small creek runs along the field twenty yards inside the trees with the only walkable crossing being a small culvert bridge to the south. Another cornfield covers the valley to the ridgeline once across the creek. We skulk along the creekbank sometimes crawling, other times slithering beneath the brush and reeds of the riparian corridor.

Reaching the bridge Nathan glasses the field to locate the gang which he spots 150 yards up creek of our set-up. All three birds scratch at the bare ground stopping occasionally to look around before continuing the search for kernels having escaped the combine. Soon the gang is 160 yards away. More scratching and moving to 170 yards. We’ve guessed wrong and sit patiently but frustrated at our bad choice of location. We let them move out of sight hoping not to spook them and head up the fields back to the car. Nathan removes his rain suit allowing the car’s heater to better reach his chilled skin.

The turkey drive, as we’ve come to call it, passes two adjacent farms with large paddocks containing the dairy herds. The land is not posted but hunting in a farmyard has the potential to frighten the livestock so we keep moving past a flock of an estimated 50 hens and yearlings picking through cow dung and yard muck.

At the head of the valley the road takes a hard, uphill turn to the right and through the conifers before crossing the ridge. The next valley is a bit tighter with less open cornfields. The terrain more suited to grazing then growing. Coming over a rise the field on the right side of the road contains a small flock of hens. We drive past scouting the fence-line seeking a concealed route into the field. We park 200 yards from the birds. Nathan impatiently exits the car leaving his rain-suit wadded up on the backseat floor. The rain pounds at the windshield turning the outside world into a wavy mirage of trees bisected by the dirt road. Pulling on my vinyl suit before grabbing my bow will keep me dry. By now, having entered the woods, Nathan must be soaked through to his skin. From the roadside I can see the flock and catch occasional glimpses of my son  doing his best to sneak up on the feeding birds.

Nathan has been wanting to go turkey hunting for a few years. He’s been out during the spring with a 20 gauge, single shot, break barreled Winchester  Sitting and waiting for turkeys wasn’t really hto his liking. He really enjoyed the run and gun style of pursuit. Being 12, his need to always see the quarry is understandable even if it’s not the best way to move into bow range of the more docile autumn birds. Today, with wind moving branches and shaking the brush along with heavy rain to soften leaves and alter the wood of dry branches so they yield rather then “crack” under his feet, the odds of his straight forward approach just might work. Successful or not, there is great joy at watching the boy on the hunt.

By some stroke of beginner’s luck or divine intervention, Nathan manages to move past the flock and find a hiding spot behind a small group of honeysuckle still holding its leaves. The flock moves past within twenty yards of the boy. Nathan draws the bow only to let down a moment later. The birds walk off and into the next field, the property line adorned with bright yellow Posted signs. Diplomatic immunity and sanctuary are bestowed upon the birds. Nathan cuts straight across the field to the car.

“No shot?” I call across the field.

“No. I had a shot but wasn’t sure of the distance. It looked about thirty and my pins only go to twenty and it just didn’t look good so I let down. It was pretty fun getting up on them.” He opens the car door setting the bow into the back seat. “I’m kinda cold and wet. I forgot to put on my rain gear.”

A still warm engine brings up the heat pretty fast. Wet bodies, cool outside temps and a small car bring have the windows fogging up in short order. We head home for a hot cup of tea and change of clothes. There is a lot of daylight left in the day along with plenty of rain to keep on hunting.










Monday, October 12, 2015

The First Week of the 2015 Fall Seaon


The excitement of opening day should rival the exhilaration felt by any child on the morning of Christmas, their birthday, or the last day of school. Opening day for fall turkey bowhunting had the same foreboding as property tax day or visit to the dentist.

If there is a good reason for not getting excited about opening day it eludes me. It couldn’t have been more then a day or two after the spring season ended before starting the countdown to October 3rd when Vermont’s fall archery season begins. With a sense of obligation, the hunting day began an hour before sunrise with a cup of hot tea.

Hunting turkeys with a bow has its rewards and is a lot of fun despite the frustrations of having many birds within gun range which is usually just out of bow range. Anything beyond 30 yards is little more then sending the arrow and hoping for a good shot. Because of my last experience with a slow death with a decent body shot, my broadhead of choice is some form of guillotine head. Many arrows with mechanical heads gave a few birds close shaves and the kill or miss philosophy is great if my ego would allow me to go an entire season and come up empty handed; hence the move to large cutting diameters on the fronts of arrows.

Squeezing the tea bag against a spoon to remove the water is a mind-numbing step in the preparation of good tea. The big squeeze adds a touch of bitterness unable to escape into the brew by steeping. Grabbing onto an absorbent sack of just boiled tea leaves is also a bit of a rush which helps me shake off the morning doldrums and get the day started. It is during the squeeze and subsequent burning of my fingers the root for my lack of enthusiasm becomes clear: I have no faith in the ability of the arrows to fly true. With no confidence in my equipment there is no joy in the hunt.

Been keeping an eye on this bird and a few of his running mates.
My Elite Energy 35 is a fantastic bow. What is not so fantastic is my ability to tune it to have the large broadheads fly to where they were aimed. During tuning, both the Muzzy M.O.R.E. heads and the Magnus Bullheads had erratic flight. Bareshaft tuning had the arrows flying consistently but my efforts were slow to bring the fieldpoint and bareshaft arrows to impact near each other. The bareshafts eventually hit within an inch of the fieldpoints with one caveat; the bareshaft arrows were always tail left and no amount of rest moving fixed this.

Just for kicks and with a bit of desperation and tossing caution to the wind I loosened the pinch-bolt for the cable slide-rod. On the Elite bows the rod is slightly S-shaped allowing the user to move the cables towards or away from the string by rotating the rod. The cable-rod was set to give the fletchings minimum clearance with the cables. With the pinch-bolt losse, the rod was rotated 45 degrees placing the slide at the 8 o’clock position when viewed from behind. The bareshaft arrow hit the target slightly tail right and this condition was confirmed with the next three arrows. Turing the rod to the 7 o’clock spot gave a bareshaft arrow which impacted straight into the target. A little more rest movement brought the bareshafts and fletched arrows to the same spot.

The test flight of the Bullheads hit dead on the vertical line painted on an old fiberfilled pillow hung at 20 yards. What about 30? Will the arrow still be on the pillow? Yes it is and remained there to 40 yards. The Muzzys were also spot on but my trust in the setup was clouded by skepticism. Pillows are one thing but will they still fly straight with the added rush of a live shot.

Opening day morning was uneventful. The hunt really amounted to a nice walk in the woods. No turkeys were discovered but I did see a nice 8 point whitetail and managed to stalk it to within 60 yards. I have no interest in hunting deer so getting close is just a warmup for getting close to the birds. The turkey hunting season ends in early November and the plan is to only take a shot at a tom and leave the hens until fall shotgun season when anything within range is fair game.






Sunday, August 30, 2015

They Are Comming Together



The Fall 2015 turkey archery season is just over a month away. Hunting turkeys with a bow is legal between October 3rd and October 23rd. Time to get the bow all tuned up, start a bit of scouting, and practice a few kee kee runs and clucks.

As part if the turkey hunting tune-up, the resident Canada goose season will become part of the training routine. Starting September 1 and running through the 25th, it is legal to take the Canada goose by any legal means. Taking geese with a bow is fully legal and its time to have a go. My home is almost on the border between the Connecticut River zone and the Interior Vermont  zone which presents a lot of opportunities for hunting.

With an incredibly smooth draw cycle, the Elite Energy 35 is the bow of choice for hunting turkeys.  During the summer  it has been my mission to have the bow tunes well enough to properly launch the guillotine style broadheads. The Magnus Bullhead and the leftover Muzzy M.O.R.E. heads (which I panned in an earlier post) are in the growing pile of archery stuff so we'll see if they will fly right and be put into use. A bit of bow tuning and dialing in of broadheads will be the fodder of a near future post.

The last post of any merit was made on July 19 and the turkeys are beginning to flock up. In addition to large groups of poults and hens, there are a few toms lurking along the edges of these gatherings. On occasion there are a few small gangs of  birds sporting impressive beards and taking a mature tom is most definitely on the fall "to do" list.

I hope you enjoy the photo essay of the gathering and growing flocks  here in Vermont.

Turkey and cows both seem to graze out in fields.

If anyone ever wonders if turkeys blend in then please take a look here. The flock had about 20 birds in it and most of them are in or just outside this photo.
Tough to see the beard but this tom is sporting something near 9"

These two are typically with the bird in the photo above.


These hens had just corralled and herded the poults into the ferns on the right side of the road before running for 20 yards and cutting into the woods. This is the first time witnessing any misdirection to take pressure off the little ones.


Lotsa little heads poking up from the grass.

The photo doesn't due these toms the proper justice in terms of showing them as toms. The red head of spring is all but gone and the camera didn't pick up the beards very well. Shooting straight into the sun doesn't help.
The birds in the flock were all within 30 yards of each other and segregated into gender and age appropriate groups.

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Starting to See Them Again

Within a week of putting away the camo, storing the dekes, and removing the broadheads from the arrows , scouting begins for the fall season and upcoming next spring.  Whether or not the scouting is a conscious act or just the remnants of hunting season is unknown. Maybe the visual scouring of fields and woodlines has become habitual. Doesn't matter too mcu; looking for turkeys is an enjoyable part of life.

The most enjoyable part of seeing summer birds is watching the hatchlings grow into poults and grow large enough to make it through the first winter. I like seeing turkeys and seeing turkeys makes me happy and I like being happy.

Being a turkey hunter seeing flocks increase in size is always a good thing when it comes to my obsession. Hunting turkeys is difficult enough without having to search high and low for birds. Even with abundant flocks my success rate is pretty low. Maybe as my skills increase long with a better success rate looking for eligible targets will become a new challenge. Nah, I doubt it. Local healthy flocks are good and I can travel to other areas if the need arises to make the game any more difficult.

The first cut of hay  has been baled  which brings a few more broods into view. Knee high grasses do a fantastic job of hiding full grown hens. The poults are almost impossible to spot unless the hens give away the locations.Just before the hay was cut two hens were crossing the field down the road. Their heads bobbed and weaved with each step and occasionally a small bird was flapping away managing to rise just above the grass before settling down. There might have been one or there might have been one hundred small turkeys trying to fly. They reminded me of watching kernels of corn explode inside an old air-pop machine we use at home. They suddenly appeared before settling back to pop back into the air. The field is just over two hundred yards away from where I took my only spring longbeard and I wonder if any of the pop-corn flight poults was its kin? I sure hope so.

These three hens hav about a dozen poults with them. These were spotted in a field about 150 yards away and the camera lens isn't good enough to make them visible.

Spotted this brood of two hens and six (as best as I was able to count) poults. Some of the poults are visible as the small fuzz just ahead of the left-most hen.

Another small brood to keep an eye upon

Tuesday, June 16, 2015

What Happened to the Body?

When the turkey has been breasted, beard removed, wings cut off and spurs taken there isn't much left to eat. The swamp is a five minute walk from the house and where the remains are left for skunks, coyotes, fisher cats, racoons or whatever will come and eat the leftovers. There is always speculation as to what takes away the the carcass. This year I set the game camera with hopes of catching a glimpse of an elusive bobcat or fisher cat or even the neighborhood dog. What took it away was really surprising.

The carcass just sitting about 50 feet from the hydric soils. No sense in letting a rotting bird contaminate the water any more than nessisary


The tree cover is pretty dense and my surprise was pretty big at having vultures cleaning up the carrion
.
The next photo has no carcass. I can only imagine the vultures picked off enough meat/guts/feathers to lower the weight enough to fly off with the remains.
 My hope was seeing a fisher cat or bobcat or something at least slightly exotic or elusive to the Vermont country side. The vultures are an extremely unexpected but really satisfying substitute. By the time stamps on the photos the vultures had a leisurely meal.

My only regret with the game camera experiment was setting the capture mode with a relatively long delay and shot spacing.  A bit closer timing and the photos might have been more exciting. Seeing the turkey flying again without its own wings would have been really fun. Setting the camera up to capture the entire event is a bit more motivation to fill my autumn tag.

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Arrow in a Longbeard




The photos from a post ago do spoil the ending of this tale. Filling a tag is just tangible proof of the outcome of the story. Social media and the GoPro are eroding the art of telling a good hunting story by showing the actual truth.

Recently, my family were stuck in traffic while driving to a soccer game. Some of the entertainment of the stop and go driving was reading the bumper stickers veneering a rusted and pretty beat up RV. One piece of wisdom catching my eye was in regards to fishing but can easily extend to turkey hunting. The sticker read: ”Fishermen are born honest but they soon get over it.”

I invite you to sit back, relax, set the lighting to ease any strain on your eyes, and sit with a hand wrapped around your favorite hunting tale beverage. This piece will not be so outlandish it just might be true. This tale is so plain it just might be made up. Read on and decide the validity for yourself.

The bird was 17 lbs. sporting a 9-inch beard. The spurs measured out at 7/8” on each side and my best guess puts him at three years old. The bird died on a Wednesday morning at 5:27 AM when it took an arrow into the chest just besides the beard. The story of his demise began twenty-four hours earlier.

As the days remain lighter in the evening, not many people except for turkey hunters, fishermen, and graveyard shift workers realize the sun breaks the horizon a bit earlier each day. At the start of the season being in the woods at 4:30 AM can require a flashlight. By the end of the season there is enough light at 4:30 to read by. My Tuesday morning hunt was scuttled by my inability or unwillingness to get out of bed before 3:30 AM and into the wood while it was still dark. 

On most hunting days I’ll sit for a while and if nothing materializes the morning is finished out by taking a walk to another field or section of woods. After hunting for 24 days (including two with Nate during youth weekend) without a shot and hearing no turkey noises in the woods this morning, heading home to have a cup of tea and leisurely breakfast felt like the right way to end the day.

Walking home on the dirt road the fatigue from awakening by 4 each morning was catching up with me and fertilizing the negativity I had been harboring about chasing turkeys. Opportunities had presented themselves and without the ability or skill to capitalize upon them, the frustration took center stage. Walking up the road my self image transformed from a 49 year old man to the unsatisfied brattyness of a four year old child who didn’t get his way. Walking down the road I began to sulk and question my decision to hunt at all.

Some sympathetic or mean spirited gobbler must have sensed my dismay and gobbled with the intent of rubbing salt into my wounds. The gobble did not entrench my hopelessness but transformed it into the desire to win. The time was 5:32 and the gobble came from the north and my best guess put the bird near the traversing ski trail. The gobble also kicked off a response of loud and continued barking by our dog who must have been out for his morning stroll. In a straight line I was 350 yards from the house. The bird gobbled again but this time the sound was a bit muffled as it moved away from the road and the dog. Normally a dog chasing of a bird would make me a bit angry but this barking had given away the tom’s escape path.

Wednesday morning I slept in until 4:15. The setup was less then a five-minute walk from the door and tends to be a bit wet. With luck, the bugs wouldn’t be too harsh. But hedged my bet on avoiding too many welts by heading in late.

After grabbing the bow, a small folding chair, and two dekes, the walk settled my excitement. The set-up was completely impromptu which is usually a bad idea. Inevitably there are branches in the way and poor cover.  This morning, as if by magic, a shooting lane appeared.

I set the two decoys and carried the chair twenty yards back into the woods. It was only after sitting down to adjust and level the chair did I see the small group of trees to the right of the decoys. This group of trees was my draw cover. The time was 4:50 AM. Now to just sit and wait.

My view of the dekes. The rootstock on the right is the draw cover which blocked the view of me from the trail.




Finding patients while sitting in the woods is difficult but a skill in need of mastery. So far this season, birds were hanging up and no amount of calling, changing calls, or rhythm would bring them in. Based upon a hunt three days earlier my friend Steve suggested not calling after the initial encounter.

In soccer, basketball, football, baseball; name the sport of choice. Having the ball is the fun part. This holds especially true when we start out. Movement off the ball and the enjoyment of assisting the team only comes later as the athlete matures in the game. With turkey hunting, making the call and hearing the gobble is fun. Turkeys are difficult to find and it is nice knowing they are still nearby, the call and gobble response keeps me interested in sitting still out in the cold or bug infested woods.

At 5:02 a gobbling with moderate volume came from my left. Best guess, and purely a guess, was making the bird 250-300 yards away. Taking a deep breath I placed the striker against the call. Cluck…Cluck….Cluck, followed by a soft yelp, yelp, yelp. The reply came from two overlapping gobbles just as soon as I began the fourth yelp. The call went into my pocket.

The trail which brought the toms to the dekes. My position is on the right up into the woods about 20 yards.
Soon there was more gobbling and the ability to resist calling back was easy. Then the long pause. The woods were silent. A woodpecker pounded at a tree, the sound gobble-like and my nerves began to jitter. Readjusting my seating position shifted the call in my pocket making the slightest noise. Not enough to alert the quiet toms but emitting enough sound to remind me it was in my pocket awaiting its turn to talk turkey.

Thirty seconds or ten minutes later another gobble finds my ears.  The call in my pocket has become animated and is begging me to play it. “Just one cluck” it asks. I resist.

My watch reads 5:17 AM. My fifteen minute sit feels like hours. The call sits in my pocket tempting me like an open bottle of gin sitting on the table of the recovering addict. Nobody is home and what harm is there in one sip? Just a taste to satisfy my curiosity. Do I still enjoy the taste, the light burn as the liquid crosses my tongue? The echoing of the clucks and rasp at the back end of the call?

Movement to my right. My heart begins to pound. Yes, it is a turkey but a single hen. The bird makes its way along the ski trial towards the decoys. The hen is in no rush stopping to peck at something in the grass and scratch at her head while balancing on one foot.  She approaches the decoy and pecks the plastic hen in the neck and turns in my direction. I sit absolutely still. She moves close enough to me I can see her blink and pick out the odd pin feathers on her head. She clucks and purrs and keeps moving away to my left. I watch this hen melt away in the underbrush and wonder how often I’ve walked right past a silent turkey just sitting still in the woods.

Another gobble chorus fills the woods. The birds are close. The release is set into the string loop and the bow sits vertically on my leg. My eyes scan to my right looking for movement. Soon two toms materialize on the ski trail a little over 100 yards away. My heart is pounding with enough force to move the tip of the arrow in perfect synchronization with each beat.

Turkey view of my position.
The birds move together and without stopping come in on the dekes. At fifty yards I can easily make out a beard on both of these turkeys. Either one is a shooter. Twenty yards from the decoys they stop and gobble. At five yards from the hen decoy the twosome passes behind my draw blind trees. The smooth draw of the Elite Energy 35 does its job and in one motion the bow is pulled to the stops and my release hand comes to anchor. Sight alignment is good as my index finger wraps the trigger. I had made the decision to take the first bird with a body shot. Not as sporting as a head and neck shot and a change of my self imposed ethos. The pin settled in at beard level and towards the wing on this front facing quartering shot. The arrow released and the tom flipped over as the arrow entered its body. It lay on the ground and flapped its wings and ran its legs with feet gripping nothing but air.

The second tom stood still and I nocked another arrow to try and tag out. Just as I drew the bow to take the second bird the just shot tom began walking down the trail. I let down on bird number two in order to watch the first bird hobbling away with my arrow sticking out of its side.

The tom entered the woods and settled beneath a fallen hemlock. I gave it a few minutes and slowly approached hoping to not spook it and have it run further into the woods. The bird was laying in the mud of a dryish creek bed. It was alive and looking around. I apologized for not being a better archer and killing it outright feeling a ting of regret about passing on the headshot.  Approaching the bird it tried to leave but not before I pressed its head into the mud and placed another foot onto the body to compress its lungs. It took a few moments but the bird died under my bootsole five minutes after taking my arrow in the chest.

100 or so hours of hunting during the 2015 spring season and I had bagged a longbeard.














Wednesday, May 27, 2015

Got One!

This morning I set up in a spot I had never hunted before. Heard a gobble and responded with a few clucks and a short yelp and decided to do nothing for a while. Two birds arrived and one caught an arrow in the beard. I'll tell the complete tale soon but I had to share this spoiler with you all.



Wednesday, May 20, 2015

An Uncooperative Longbeard




The first half of each spring season has more the feel of a detailed scouting walk then actual hunts. What I mean by this is many of the early season hunts are more learning experiences then shooting events. The set-up is different than originally scouted; the birds move in from the left end of the field and not the center; the birds were just passing through on their way to better feeding and no longer hang out in this patch of woods. In short, early on in the season I seem to get it all wrong.

By the time the turkey’s habits and patterns (if you can call them habits and patterns) are teased out from the general randomness of these critters, they all go quiet. What is certain is the gobbling which began in the trees and worked its way with the toms to the ground has been reduced to tree gobbling only. Once the feet begin making tracks the gobbling stops. Within a week the birds aren’t even gobbling in the trees anymore. Why and how every bird within hearing distance stops making a sound is flummoxing and a bit amazing.  I can understand or at least get my head around birds in a particular location staying silent but not everything in a particular valley or ridgeline. You’d think some ambitious jake who has yet to see any hen action would sound off.

By the second week of the season my hunting has been pretty repetitive. Find a good bow friendly spot (enough room to draw the bow with enough cover to hide the movement) and arrive by 4:30. Set some dekes at 15 and another at 20 yards from the sit. Now my ranges are known. When the time on my watch can be seen without the backlight or when there have been a few consistent gobbles I begin calling. A few soft clucks and maybe a quiet yelp or two. If there is a response to the calls my reply will have a bit more volume and slightly quicker tempo. The extra volume and tempo are how I try to sound “excited and willing” but for all I know my up-tempo and louder calling might be telling the toms to run. After an hour with no action boredom sets in and my legs are slightly numb from sitting for the past 90 minutes. Time for a walkabout to spy a few fields and head back to the house to schedule domestic chores and get off to work. All in all, my hunts have been a nice walk in the morning.

The third Saturday of the season and Nate, my 11 y.o. son, asks to tag along. We repeat the afore mentioned scenario and head back towards home by skirting a swamp. The bugs have yet to hatch and the leaves are just beyond swelled buds. The sightlines through the woods are still long. Soon the understory will occlude the waist to head height views and the ferns will block seeing anything not taller then a grown man’s knees.

Just as we cross the brook I take a quick look around. “Nate, is that a bear?” My finger directs his gaze to a large black lump about 100 yards to the north.

“I don’t think so it looks like a stump.” Then it moves revealing the orange radio collar as the black lump transforms into a black bear. “Oh yea, it’s a bear. What to we do?”

“Just look for cubs and if there aren’t any we should be fine. I don’t think it knows we’re here.”

No cubs so we watch the bear sit and look around before continuing its walk. It moves north, we head home to the south. This was the first bear Nate has ever seen while spending time in the woods. The sighting made the hunt a worthwhile adventure.

After a late morning lunch there are still three hours available to chase turkeys. Trigger time in Vermont is half an hour before sunrise until noon. I’m not too hopeful about finding a late morning tom. The woods have been devoid of turkey calls and my chances of interacting with a tom will be more random luck then echo location.

The three-mile walk on logging roads is a long loop through a stand of about 1,000 acres. Most of it isn’t accessible by vehicles. The sun is bright and the temps are in the mid 40s. My walk consists of moving a few hundred yards until I find decent cover and use the JL boxcall to send a few yelps into the woods. If nothing calls back after a minute or two I keep moving. For the next 90 minutes this pattern is repeated with each calling session slightly less enthusiastic.

Eventually boredom sets in and rather then stop I begin using the scratchbox to play the lead as I cover classic 70’s rock anthems like Led Zepplin’s “Stairway to Heaven;”
 AC/DC’s “Back in Black;” and Kiss “Detroit Rock City.” Still no response from the toms but I really don’t care. I’m tired and hungry.

JL Custom Turkey Calls packages its calls with a basic instruction sheet on reproducing clucks, purrs, yelps, cuts and using a rubber band to center the lid to reproduce a gobble. To gobble with the box call the band holds the paddle to the box and applies light pressure. Next,  the caller either holds the box or paddle while repeatedly shaking the call. The gobble imitation is pretty good. The logging road drops between a large hill and small knoll just a bit longer than ½ mile from home. With no fear of chasing anything off my boxcall gobbling becomes a competition between holding the padle and shaking the box or holding the box and shaking the paddle.

The experiment has been going almost nonstop for two or three minutes when the woods exploded with a loud and presumably close gobble emanating from an actual turkey. I froze to look around and carefully placed the boxcall into my pocket. The bow carry sling was still attached and was removed as I scanned the terrain for a hiding spot. There was none so I scrambles a few yards off the road and gained a few yards of elevation putting me dead level with the top of the knoll. The hillside was steep enough for me to sit or almost lean against and the hemlock branches were far enough above me as to not interfere with the bow.

Dumb luck had a mouth call set like a good jag of chew between my left cheek and gums. The scare of jumping a close tom and sending him packing dried my mouth and the call stuck to my tongue. Another old logging road moved up the hill to the left and the well traveled logging road had three nice shooting lanes with drawing cover radiating from my location.

My first attempt at a yelp to assist the still hidden bird in locating the invading tom and his date was a complete bust. It wasn’t a yelp but more of a raspy choke. The tom bit hard and responded with a harsh gobble which came from the end of the knoll.

The top of his fan breached the edge of the knoll and the bird stepped onto the road in full strut.  Unfortunately there was no shot.  Most of the tom was behind a network of low hobblebush and broken pine limbs. Not certain and arrow would make it through I sucked on my tongue trying to pull up a bit of moisture to release the call reeds.

When the tom spun to display I caught sight of the beard and spurs (6-8” rope with 1”  hooks). The release was set into the D-loop and the bow set vertically resting one cam on my thigh. The shooting lanes were separated by large hemlocks and would provide good cover to draw the bow.  While the tom was looking away I managed a quiet ”come hither” cluck intending to move the bird  two feet and into the road. His fan fell and wings retracted to his body. The bird moved up the knoll through the underbrush and began scanning the hillside for this elusive hen.

The tom is only twenty yards afar and shooting it is a dead level chip shot with one problem. There is an awning of branches across the road low enough to interfere with the arcing flight of the arrow. I still have no shot so time to sit and wait for the bird to leave the knoll and head up the hill to find this seductive hen.

In Tom Kelly’s book,  “A Fork in the Road,” the master recommends setting up so the hunter has a clear view of any road and to establish a spot to have a shot into both roads at any intersection. But dumb luck I have this and it should only be a matter of time before I can verify Mr. Kelly’s wisdom.

The longish beard gobbles and struts on the top of the knoll. He has center stage and puts on a fantastic show. The turkey is close enough I can hear the fan pop open and wingtips tickle the leaves. After each strutting event, the bird preens itself and the shaking feathers leave a rustling sound in the late morning air.

When the bird turns his back I can glance at the watch on my release hand. The small bumps of rock and forest floor debris which I hadn’t noticed when I scrambled in, now pressure my rear end in a rather uncomfortable way. I’ve been sitting motionless for thirty minutes. The arrogance of the tom expecting the hen to some to him is second in amazement to his ability to just sit and wait. As the pain in my butt grew, my patients thinned.

At forty-five minutes the bird descended the knoll back towards the logging road. Each step closer to the road kicked my heart rate back up a notch. My thumb felt for the hook of the release to be sure the D-loop was still engaged. In season’s past, I rushed the shot by skipping the waypoints of the shot process causing the arrow to miss the target. .As the tom stepped up to the first 25 yard shooting lane I ran through the shot checklist: Anchor at the jaw; curl the finger over the trigger to the last knuckle; elbow in line with the arrow flight; align the sight housing and peep; lower the elbow to release the shot.
The two logging roads came together at a very acute angle on the steep hillside. The space between the roads was occupied by a band of  incompetent rock and broken stone. Which I knew was there but was unable to see from my current position.  Given the choice between scaling the fragmented defile of broken and crumbly rock or an easy stroll up a fairly well defined and graded road, the choice, for a human, is a no brainer. The easy footing of the road wins. For a strutting tom turkey showing off to a sexy hen, only the miserable path will enhance his aversion to danger.  The bird managed to skirt the easy shot and remained out of view only giving away his position by gobbling at the top of the rise. “Rats!” was my audible reaction (we all know it wasn’t rats). Was I busted and the bird was toying with me? Was the bird in need of a bit of dangerous fun hence it scaled the path of most resistance? Doesn’t matter. My shot opportunity was gone.

I snuck up the hill scratching away the leaves hoping to imitate a love struck hen chasing the masculine hunk up the hill and cover my moves. The bird stayed forty yards ahead of me gobbling at every bench in the terrain. At noon, the end of legal trigger time, I looked up to see the tom backlit by the sun. His red waddles made transparent by the strong noontime light. The body a silhouette with one wing extended while the arching middle feather displayed in my direction.





























Tuesday, May 19, 2015

More Hunting Stories on the Way

Hello Readers,
Sorry for the gap in the posting. There has been an unexpected bit of good fortune at the house. My daughter has been recruited to play soccer at a private school. This came out of the parking lot of left field it was so unanticipated.

The application process has been quite busy writing letters and entrance essays. Not just my daughter. The school also wants something from me and my wife. We have one small laptop at the house which is used by everyone so keyboard time has been limited.

In the past week there have been some awesome hunting adventures to share with you.  I'll get them up soon and thanks for the patients with this.

Be well, Kevin


Tuesday, May 12, 2015

The First Great Hunt of the Season.




The seventh day of the 2015 spring season fell on a Thursday. This day was the first great hunting day of the season.

6:30 Wednesday morning when driving towards home after a whole unsatisfying hunt, I spotted three toms displaying in the field by the tree. The location is a fifteen-minute walk from the house traversing fields with a few strips of woodland to wade through. After work, the dog needed a good walk so heading to the tree to see if any branches needed trimming was the mission.

For the past two years I’ve been in grad school with the intention of finding a better paying career. Hasn’t quite worked out as planned. To earn some cash I continue to work as a landscaper and fine gardener. Any holes being cut along field edges and beneath pine trees are always pruned in with cut made for visual appeal in addition to good horticultural practice. While the dog sniffed around in the grass, my ten minutes removed a few buckthorn and honeysuckle saplings along with some deadwood to fashion a bowhunter sized grotto. Judging distance in dim light is often difficult.  A few of the cutoffs were pressed into service demarcating 15, 20, and 25 yards.

Thursday at 4:45 the dekes were set at 20 yds. The calls were properly arranged on my leg; one arrow on the nock and another set to the side in case a second shot presents itself. Time to just sit and enjoy the increasing light and wait for the show to begin.

By 5:00 there had been a few far off gobbles but nothing sounding close enough for a response. When a gobble came from the next field over a bit of second guessing set in about my location. Too late to move so just sit it out.

The crack of sticks coming from the woods to my right caught my attention bringing me from near boredom to pie eyed. Moving my eyes to the limit in order to peek with minimal movement preceded a slow turn of the head, my eyes scanning the trees. A short flash of white gave the deer away.  Two does moved with caution along the woods line stopping to bob their heads before dipping them down to nibble on the new sprouts just breaking the from beneath the soil. The wind didn’t betray my location and the deer approached the decoys moving past me at 15 yards. For once I could smell the deer without being detected. The decoys have lured in more deer than turkeys.

The deer left the field and the only sounds were songbirds and the breeze moving the swollen buds causing the branches to rub against each other. A crow flew overhead cackling to its mates. A few geese passed above. Never saw them but heard the reverberation of honks. My watch read 6:15 and if something wasn’t dead in fifteen minutes it was time to break camp and head home to begin the workday.

A faint yelp made it over the rise from the swamp into the field. The double sided cedar scratchbox responded with a few clucks and cuts. Several hens responded. My calling cut them off. With the clock working against me trying to sweet talk any following toms didn’t seem a good bet. Angering the hens seemed like a good play. If the girls come looking for a fight just maybe the boys will follow them in.

The other side of the cedar scratchbox has a bit higher pitch. Drawing it across the walnut peg gave a loud  series of raspy yelps which were cut off by the hens closing in on my hide out. A few minutes of frantic yelping brought two hens into the field. The handheld calls were placed into my boot top to keep them available and quiet. The release hook slid through the D-loop with my finger pressing the backside of the trigger blade to avoid an unintentional disconnect. The bow rotated from the horizontal resting position on my thighs to the vertical alignment needed to draw and shoot.

The hens moved across the field towards the dekes; their heads scanned from side to side. Yelp yelp, in rapid succession, short pause, yelp yelp, short pause; this pattern just kept repeating itself.  An occasional cluck broke the pattern but the hens kept up this banter of one to three short yelps.

Being female it was illegal to shoot these birds during the spring season. Some insect began boring into the exposed forehead just above the head net. My instinct was to swat the bug but fear of getting busted and sending the hens into alarm mode overrode the need to stop the bug from biting me. Slow movement might be okay. The move to my forehead was deliberate and steady.. The hens were looking in my direction when my index finger popped the insect. The hens continued yelping and moving my way.

When they stopped a few yards from the decoys my watch read 6:30. I had to leave soon and with no evidence of approaching toms the bow was lifted into a shooting position. The bowstring remained still as my draw arm pantomimed coming to anchor. While at “full draw” the hens shook out their feathers adding a bit of rustling to the cacophony of the morning. They didn’t spook validating my 3-D camo and technique.

With the same deliberation as squishing the bug on my forehead, my foot located several dried sticks shed from the pine tree. Snapping them made the hens nervous and soon they made a purposeful escape back into the woods.

Why was this hunt so successful? The camo works fantastically well allowing me to draw on birds only 12 yards away. Listening to the hens communicate was insightful. I hadn’t realized the yelp was common vernacular. Until this mo hunt it was assumed the yelp was a longer series and used only in the vicinity if toms. My odds of becoming a harvester this spring had just gone up.