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#3 | ||||||
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Garry, my favorite turkey gun is my Rem 870 Wingmaster 12 ga that I bought with my money made by throwing hay bales in the summer( $1.00/hr) when I was 17.
It now sports a 21" barrel with a turkey X-Full choke, and a 2X Weaver scope. Put the crosshairs on the wattles and down goes the bird. More importantly, it has a sling, making it much easier to get around when moving. I shot my first bird this year with it--the second bird was with the Grade 2 hammer gun. Sure killed a lot of deer with that gun also, with a rifled choke tube in place, and still have its original 28" barrel.
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"How kind it is that most of us will never know when we have fired our last shot"--Nash Buckingham |
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Harold Lee Pickens For Your Post: |
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#4 | |||||||
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Quote:
At the risk of ridicule, I was carrying my Mossberg pump gun. It's got a sling, doesn't weigh all that much, has luminous sites...and shoots Winchester Longbeard shells accurately to pretty significant distances. One of my goals for this Fall is to take a turkey with my EH 10. I bought it just for such hunting.
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"Doubtless the good Lord could have made a better game bird than bobwhite, and better country to hunt him in...but equally doubtless, he never did." -- Guy de la Valdene (from A Handful of Feathers ) "'I promise you,' he said, 'on my word of honor, I won't die on the opening of the bird season.'" -- Robert Ruark (from The Old Man and the Boy) |
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| The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Garry L Gordon For Your Post: |
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#5 | ||||||
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Cold, rainy morning. Slipped out back of the house at 11:00 am, and set up against some round bales in a hay field . No response to calling, waited a half hour and a bird gobbled just over the crest of the hill--less than a hundred yds away. Thought he was coming right in, but then he turned and walked out of sight while gobbling to every thing I thru at him. Darn!
Was carrying a nice little Lefever G grade Damascus 16 F/F with 1 oz RST 6's. May try again tomorrow, or might go fishing--or hey, might do both. This quarantine thing is really complicating my life.
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"How kind it is that most of us will never know when we have fired our last shot"--Nash Buckingham |
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| The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to Harold Lee Pickens For Your Post: |
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#6 | ||||||
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Strolled out the back door at a leisurely 9:00am yesterday, and spotted 2 longbeards and 2 hens at the edge of the hayfield 300+ yds away. Snuck around the back of a line of round bales, crawled in-between 2 and set up. Wanted to put a decoy out, but they would have spotted me instantly. Called a few times and they gobbled back, got them to within 150 yds, but then the hens steered them off. Nice weather, enjoyable show, packed up and went fishing-brought back another nice string of bluegills , crappies, and had a 3 pound bass flip off just as I went to lip him.
So today, walked out the back yard at 7:30 in the rain and sat up where the gobblers were yesterday, and spotted them 100 yds in back of where I was set up yesterday. Was able to sneak around the crest of the hill and get a nice set up against the round bales on the other side of yesterday. I set a decoy up 30 yds in back of me where it would be easily spotted. The birds were on property I don't have permission to hunt, so I needed to call them over the property line. I yelped a few times and 2 red heads popped up on the horizon--and just laid the call down. There were 2 big longbeards and 3 hens, and figured the hens might give me trouble. They could see the decoy and slowly worked in . The gobblers put on quite a show for me at 25 yds--could have killed them both with 1 shot, and maybe a hen to boot. Finally one stepped thru the farm lane into the field, at 15 yds. Wow , 7 1/2's , are devastating at that range. 10 1/4" beard, 1 1/8" spurs, didn't weigh it, but at least 20 lbs. Had the Lefever 16 and a Parker 16 hammer gun laid out, but because of the rain, grabbed the scoped 870, wished I'd grabbed one of the doubles. Done for the season now, turkey for dinner tonight. Oh, BTW, was about 50 yds off my back yard fenceline.
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"How kind it is that most of us will never know when we have fired our last shot"--Nash Buckingham |
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| The Following 11 Users Say Thank You to Harold Lee Pickens For Your Post: |
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#7 | ||||||
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Harold, as a fellow Buckeye, I loved your shirt in your earlier photo. While there are huge questions as to what this season may look like, I have faithfully paid my money for what will be our 40th season of season tickets to Buckeye football!
Best to you, my friend. Dave
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“I have never in my life seen a Kentuckian who didn’t have a gun, a pack of cards, and a jug of whiskey.” -Andrew "Old Hickory" Jackson, America's 7th President |
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#8 | ||||||
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OhowIhateOhioState
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"Striving to become the man my dog thinks I am" |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to John Dallas For Your Post: |
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#9 | ||||||
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Some of us "Parker guys" were hunting birds in South Dakota a few years back and we kicked up a few turkeys in a patch of pine trees in a ravine. I wandered over to have a look and found that they clearly had been chowing down on a very dead compadre. Anyone ever seen that one before??
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#10 | ||||||
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Being ground-feeding scavengers they'll eat about anything... especially if there be maggots in it.
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"I'm a Setter man. Not because I think they're better than the other breeds, but because I'm a romantic - stuck on tradition - and to me, a Setter just "belongs" in the grouse picture." George King, "That's Ruff", 2010 - a timeless classic. |
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