Gellar
Well-known member
Scout!! Most birds I kill are dead before the season starts. Not literally, but because I know where they roost, which direction they like to head, what time they get there.
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I was typing my response but deleted it as this says everything right here. Decoys and calls can be useful if you don’t have them patterned.If you have birds patterned and they are entering a field in the same spot, 90% of your work is done. The other 10% is setting up the blind and shooting straight. In your case, a decoy and calls would not be necessary. I would set up your blind about 25-30 yards from the crossing and wait for them to show up.
If you’re brand new to turkey hunting your calling and decoy are as likely to spook them as pull them in, especially when they are on a reliable pattern. But calls, decoys, and learning and improving are part of the fun.
That said, a single hen decoy and a call you’re confident in can add some interest to your hunt. I would start with a decent decoy right away rather than buy a cheap one and upgrade later. Don’t over call if you elect to do so. Also, if you do go with a decoy, don’t set it up right in front of where you expect them to enter the field. E.g. if you’re set up on the edge of the field and the spot where they enter is 25 yards away at your 9 o’clock, set the decoy at about 2 o’clock at 20 yards. The decoy is your backup plan.
Your initial thought on the blind was the right one. Don’t hesitate on using one. Setting it up in advance and brushing it in will up your odds. They are extremely effective tools for good experienced turkey hunters that want to enjoy a hunt with family and friends.
In terms of blinds. If you have them well brushed in and/or in a good ambush spot they can be very nice. They can help with the temperature, they can disguise your movements and they can muffle your natural noises. However, they need to be really well brushed in or put up well in advance of using them. Turkeys notice changes to the environment and they will be leery of a camouflage tent that just appears overnight. If it has been there for a long time or it is obscured by a lot of brush, vegetation they may be less leery.
It could be that the area I am hunting is full of pop up blinds and the birds are just wise to them. But I had several steer clear of my blind when I had just put it up. If it had been up for a week or so they didn't seem to be nervous about it.Funny, I have found the opposite to be true. I find turkeys to be sort of stupid when it comes to pop up blinds. Obviously brushing up and putting it up a few days ahead of time can't hurt. Deer, for me, are a different story.
Everyone's experience obviously differs depending on the birds that they are hunting.
Thanks for all the advice everyone, just to clear up a few things I will be hunting our family farm so I won't have other hunters to deal with. There's a flock of around 18 or so that pass back and forth between the neighbors farm and ours. Here's a picture I took of a few of them a couple weeks agoView attachment 127333
Well I didn't draw a turkey tag, not sure why I even bother to put in for anything besides deer . Oh well, more time to spend on the dirt bike!
Yep there are turkeys in ND, spring and a fall season but both are lottery. Western ND has more than we do in the SEThat's too bad. ND has turkey now? Only time I ever saw them was many years ago in Ft Ransom area. No seasons then, at least that I recall.
That's good to hear! I spent most my life minus the last year or so in MN and lived amoung turkeys. I would watch them when i was working within the metro area and they just never appealed to me. Now out here in western ND I figured I should give it a try!Yep there are turkeys in ND, spring and a fall season but both are lottery. Western ND has more than we do in the SE