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
Page 2
"Remember," he
added, "I'd never shot a turkey before. It was amazing hearing
the bird come to the call. Because other than ducks, and perhaps
rattling deer, to communicate with a creature like that and know
that it's coming-it's almost unexplainable. Then, out of nowhere,
I could see his feet moving. I wasn't even sure it was a tom.
But when I saw that lit-up red head, and the way he was focused
on those decoys, I knew that we were in business. What really
amazed me," he added, "is that even at that distance,
he never saw me."
Meanwhile, I remained completely
clueless as to what was happening. The bird had gone mute; I didn't
dare move, and Ron was completely fixated on the opening with
the shotgun up on his right knee. When the Mossberg 835 pump offloaded
the Winchester Supreme 3-inch load of high-velocity #6 turkey
shot, it almost bowled me over.
Bear in mind, Ron Ward is
walking around-in this case, sitting-on an artificial hip. Having
broken a hip myself, I know how tough it is to get up fast. But
when that scattergun sounded off he bolted off the ground like
the Million Dollar Man and raced into the clearing.
He beat me to the bird. And
we did a high-five version of the "Happy Dance" that
would've made even my old pal Reavis Wortham swell with pride.
Meanwhile, McIntyre and Kyle had struck out.
The next morning, Ron and
I set out in search of hogs. McIntyre dropped us off at two separate
stands with corn feeders, after which we saw enough turkeys to
fill a cattle truck. At about 8:00, Ron put a fat 150-pound feral
porker on the ground. Kyle and Ross, meanwhile, were busy stalking
the opposite side of the creekbottom that Ron and I had covered
the evening before.
"When we got out of
the bunkhouse, we could already hear the birds gobbling,"
Kyle recalled. "We got within a few hundred yards of the
creekbottom, parked the truck in a concealed area and started
heading for the trees. We settled in, put on our face masks and
Ross started calling. Six different roosts talked back to us."
Eckhardt focused on the nearest bird and signaled Kyle to follow
him. "We got as close as we dared; about 250 yards away from
the roost tree, and then set up the decoys," he continued.
"It was a single in an oak tree, and he sounded like he was
sitting in my front pocket. Unfortunately, he hopped out and flew
across the other side of the creek. So, we worked back down to
the only dry spot on the creekbed and crossed over again."
At that point, the duo heard
another bunch of birds sound off around 400 yards to the west.
"Ross would call," said Kyle, "and they'd answer.
He'd call again; they'd answer again." Not a single, mind
you, but several gobblers. One group, farther off in the distance
and oblivious to the calling, were doing their own talking without
being prompted. Given the excited nature of the birds and considering
the sheer number of toms making the noise, Eckhardt and Kyle decided
to zero in on them.
"We listened to the
birds talk as we approached them,": Kyle said.. "When
we were about 150 yards between two different roosts, we set up
again. We huddled beneath a large mesquite tree that was fringed
with some thick underbrush," he explained. "It was open
all around us, but we were still well covered." With the
sun at their backs, the two hunters had arrived at a near-perfect
bring-'em-in scenario.
"I had heard about turkey
hunting, about how it got your adrenaline flowing and made you
shake like a leaf," Kyle commented. "But until I heard
them answer that first call at such a close distance, I had no
idea what to expect."
What he got was an eye-opening
display of Rio Grande turkey behavior-a remarkable experience,
especially for a veteran archer who had never before killed a
gobbler and had nonetheless decided to take his first tom in the
most challenging fashion possible.
"We were covered head-to-toe
with Realtree Advantage camo," recalled Kyle. "The decoys
were about 20 yards out, right in the open in a clear shooting
lane. The birds on the left talked for a while; then the birds
on the right sounded off. Then, for no apparent reason, they all
shut up."
Kyle and Ross sat and waited.
Finally, the first gobbler approached from around 150 yards to
the left. Then another, and another, and yet another. Three of
the four were in full strut.
"It seemed like it
took them forever to get close," Kyle said. "Ross cut
the calling to a minimum, hoping they'd see the decoys and come
on in. When they got about 75 yards away, the three strutters
broke away and moved in to around 20 yards broadside. They were
behind the brush, though. Something had them rattled, so they
stopped moving and locked up beyond the ground cover.
"The fourth bird finally
came in, followed by another gobbler we hadn't seen before. He
was strutting big-time. The non-strutting bird came in and pushed
the rest out into the open. I pulled back, took aim, and then
realized that the two birds were lined up like dominos. I didn't
want to hit both at once, so I waited for the third. He walked
past the pair, stepped into the open and I let fly on him as he
quartered away."
The arrow, a 29-inch-long
Easton XX75 2413 rigged with a 90-grain Puckett Gobblerstopper,
entered the bird's right wing, went through its back and then
passed through its neck-a perfect shot. "At that point, I
saw something I couldn't believe," Kyle remarked. "When
the bow went off, the other gobblers hopped around a bit. But
they didn't leave. They strutted around for a few seconds and
puffed up even larger. And then, watching the already-dead tom
flop around, they moved in and pecked at him. Then," he added,
"they commenced to tear into him like a pack of starved hyenas.
All of them did it, but two of 'em got really carried away.
"We decided at that
point that we'd better go get him. I was 10 yards away from the
tree before the attacking gobblers realized I was there and headed
for parts unknown."
The tom wasn't a long-bearded
monster, but neither was he a half-grown jake. He weighed around
16 pounds, with a 6-inch beard and 1-inch spurs. He was also one
of the most brightly-plumed toms I've ever seen, with feathers
that glowed an iridescent mix of bronze, orange, red and blue
in the soft light of the early-morning sun. Any gobbler taken
with a bow is a trophy bird, however, and being that this was
Kyle's first-ever, downed with a PSE Mach-8 compound set at 60
pounds, it was, he said, "a dream come true." A dream
that many archers who have spent years trying hard have yet to
experience.
Turned out Kyle isn't just
a top-flight archer; he's also a very good actor. Ron and I walked
in to camp, where McIntyre, Eckhardt and Kyle stood by the truck
with faces that looked as if they'd just left a funeral.
"Do any good?"
I asked, already knowing the answer.
"Nope," Kyle responded.
"We didn't even see a bird, much less get a shot at one."
"I can't believe it,"
added Eckhardt. "I just knew they'd show up this morning."
"Too bad," I answered.
"But hey; we still have another day. Don't give up, man;
you'll get one yet. Ron and I saw a bunch of 'em off our hog stands."
"Bozka," McIntyre
said, "take a look behind you." There, dead as a hammer,
laid Kyle's freshly-killed gobbler.
I will not-make that can
not-relay to you what I said after that. Gotta give 'em credit,
though. Those guys fooled me, and fooled me good.
It appears that we're going
to be allowed the privilege of hunting on the Ingram's magnificent
ranch again this spring. Let's just say that, aside from the usual
pre-trip planning, I'm already cooking up some plans of my own.
And they don't have anything to do with turkey hunting.
I'd tell you all about it,
but they'll find out soon enough.
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