Shafts vs. Shells
Any way you go, whether it's a 12-gauge pump or a high-tech compound bow,
spring turkeys are downright dazzling birds.
By Larry Bozka
Pearsall, Texas, April 2, 1998-Opening
weekend of the South Texas Rio Grande turkey season. A magical
time of yellow-bloomed prickly pear, waving seas of bluebonnets
and a growing sense that the season is turning a fresh new leaf. The air is clean
and brisk, and life is everywhere.
Thirty-year-old Kyle Ward has been
hunting with his father, Ron, as long as he can remember. Kyle
is a bowhunter, one of the most avid archers I've ever met, and
compound in hand he has dropped his share of game--among the lot,
he says modestly, "around 15 deer, 6 of which were bucks."
Last November he arrowed a heavy-racked 12-pointer (a "6-by-6,"
as it's known back home in Wisconsin). But like his dad, a retired
oral surgeon who now spends every possible
day afield, he had never killed a turkey.
Me? I've shot a few. But not this
time.
"I'm gonna be a guide,"
I told my buddies prior to the trip. Every time I said it I couldn't
help but laugh.
Neither could they.
Wild turkeys, you see, are
extremely intelligent birds. They have the eyesight of an eagle,
can discern colors of every imaginable hue, and heaven help you
if you so much as twitch when a big tom is in sight. You move,
he's gone.
It's long been said that
if wild turkeys had a highly-developed sense of smell, we'd never
kill one. I believe it.
I'd spent weeks practicing
on a Knight & Hale Model 111 "Ole Reliable" Double
Mouth Diaphragm call ("Great for the beginner, as well as
the advanced caller," the packaging read). The best time
to practice, I discovered, was while driving the 55 miles of Beltway
8 between my home in Seabrook and the Texas Fish & Game office
off Hwy. 290 in northwest Houston. In retrospect, I'm surprised
some of the toll booth ladies didn't dial 911 to report some loony
in a green Durango making obscene noises.
Anyway, I got better and
the season drew closer. Next thing I knew Ron, Kyle and I were
opening the gate to Bill and Bobbie Ingram's Rock House Ranch
in Frio County. We were invited guests; no commercial turkey hunting
is done here. Which, given my degree of expertise at turkey calling,
sounded absolutely wonderful. No wild turkey is stupid, but these
birds were at least relatively uneducated.
We arrived a little after
lunchtime, chowed down some sandwiches with our hosts Macky McIntyre
and ranch manager/biologist Ross Eckhardt and hit the field. A
small, narrow creek intersected the road, fringed by a thick curtain
of mesquite and oak trees that, according to Eckhardt, were serving
as roosts for several groups of birds.
Ron and I headed upstream;
McIntyre and Kyle went the opposite way. I slammed the truck door-a
tactic that, like blowing a screech owl "hooter" or
a woodpecker call-normally gets 'em gobbling. Nothing but silence.
So we slowly walked toward the rising sun, looking closely for
any sign of birds. There were, however, no tracks. And still,
no sounds. I blew the "hooter" again. Again, no response.
We set up on the western
side of a large, freshly-plowed field. I planted a pair of dekes-an
Outlaw jake-and-hen combo-while Ron climbed up a tripod stand
immediately above the brushpile I'd hunkered into. It was unusually
hot, and the mosquitoes were raging. After about 45 minutes of
calling, waiting and sweating, I looked up toward Ron.
"What do you think?"
I asked.
"Pretty slow,"
he answered.
"Let's move. We're sure
not doing any good here."
I packed the decoys into
the mesh backpack. Ron climbed down from the tripod and we edged
closer to the hardwood creekbottom. "You thought the mosquitoes
were bad back there?" I asked. Ward wiped a bit of mosquito
blood-make that his blood-from his sweat-beaded face and nodded
his head.
Ron Ward is a personable
fellow, but when he hits the field he turns into a focused hunter.
The non-responsive birds, coupled with miserably hot weather,
the relentless mosquitoes and a wannabe "guide" who
had never before called in a turkey, had no doubt made him feel
somewhat pessimistic about the whole deal.
To be honest, so did I. So,
I shut up and followed Ward's hand signal to move farther uphill,
where we slowed down the pace and stalked through the senderos
between the dense thickets of mesquite and live oak. "I was
pretty much convinced that the birds-assuming they were even there-were
less than enthusiastic about your calling," he later admitted.
That's one of the things I truly appreciate about Ron Ward. The
man says what's on his mind, and rookie that I am, I was certainly
in no position to disagree.
We turned a corner, headed
back to the west and-just as we were about to round a treeline
bend, simultaneously spotted several gobblers ambling about around
200 yards away in the fading evening light on the same side of
the brushline we were skirting. In unison, we stopped in our tracks.
"I remember it vividly,"
Ward said that night around the campfire. "I got in front
of you, and moved back in the brush. Positioned like that, neither
one of us could see a danged thing."
I remembered it well, too.
There was no way I could move out into the open and set the decoys
in place without being spotted, so I stuck them in the ground
just a few yards from the edge and backed into the underbrush.
Moments later, I heard clucking.
"You started out with
the box call, clucking a 'putting' kind of noise, and I thought
to myself: What is he doing? I'd never heard such a thing. You
kept telling me that you could hear the birds, but I couldn't
hear a thing, and I sure couldn't see anything. I didn't have
a clue what was going on."
I didn't, either. No matter
how I worked that box call, the tom wouldn't talk to me. So, I
popped "Ole Reliable" into my mouth, made a feeble
attempt at a "kee-kee run" and the bird sounded off
like a noontime factory alarm. A nanosecond later, I was shaking
uncontrollably.
It was totally unnerving.
I couldn't see anything, either, but at least Ron was ahead, between
me and the incoming gobbler with the decoys about 10 yards to
my right. I hoped-make that prayed-that the bird would spot the
decoys and move on in.
"I still couldn't see
him," Ward continued, "but it was obvious that he was
getting closer. He couldn't have been much more than 50 yards
away at that point. It sent a shiver down my spine. You'd tell
me 'I hear something;' you're making this crazy noise behind me,
and I have no idea what the hell it is. When the bird gobbled
back at you, and did it so loudly, I finally realized that something
was going on. I can literally still hear my heart pounding. It
was like, 'We're really doing this!' And it was exhilarating.
continued
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