Category Archives: turkey and turkey hunting

Gaining Momentum

I’m just over a month from opening day, and pretty much every weekend of the season is now booked.  That opening weekend is earmarked for sitting under a tree and trying to lure an early season tom into range is pretty much a given.  I’ll be guiding around a friend who missed last season via the birth of his first child on the weekend after that.  Then I’m off to BC for a much anticipated hunt (more on that to come below), and then we get a three day weekend here in Ontario, which only means three days of turkey hunting and barbecuing in the evening.  If I haven’t tagged out by then, and odds are I won’t have done so, I still get one more full weekend and a bonus day the week after that since this year the Ontario spring season closes on a Saturday.  By then the mosquitoes are usually so horrendous that I almost hope for rainy mornings and windy days, just to keep most of my hard-earned blood inside my veins.  This year, a Thermacell is on my wish list.
So from the above, I guess I am by definition a weekend hunter.  I have no other choice, since I’m not smart enough to be a billionaire and not handsome enough to be a trophy husband.  But that’s okay, since I’ve never used the words ‘weekend hunter’ as a pejorative term.  One of the lies I tell myself is that if I had the means and resources to hunt every day, I may find it boring or somewhat like a chore.
Of course, we all know that isn’t true.
I’m always thinking of hunting, using my hyperactive imagination to run through hundreds of ‘what if’ scenarios and set-ups.  I’m also constantly on the lookout for new gear, and aside from the Thermacell that I keep procrastinating on, this year I will require a durable, airline-capable hard gun case.  I fly often in my line of work and I’ve seen the abuse that the baggage handlers of every airline subject baggage to.  I don’t exactly “baby” my Remington 870, but the thought of it being flung and bounced around by anonymous airline staff makes me cringe.  My analytic nature (combined with an unhealthy addiction to online hunting stores) has led me down several paths in researching the purchase of a gun case, some of which are hopelessly too expensive others which are obviously too flimsy for effective.  I’m down to three options, so now I have to actually go to a store and inspect them myself.
I’m down to Pelican, SKB, and Plano cases.  All have their benefits.  Pelican cases are essentially bomb-proof, but will cost a portion of a mortgage payment.  They also suffer from the notable handicap of not being available at any nearby dealers, so I have to factor the shipping of some seriously oversized equipment into the price.  Plano cases cost the least, but all the reviews I’ve read indicate they are a bit on the flimsy side.  I own a cheap Plano case already, but it was never intended to fly, it was more of car-case.  SKB seems to have the case that fits the logical niche between the two, but like the Pelican case, seems to only be available as a shipped item (in from the USA so far as I can tell) so again this will add to the ultimate cost factor.
Decisions, decisions.
On another turkey gear note, my accomplice for the upcoming Merriam’s turkey hunt is well on his way, having purchased a box call, some mouth calls, and a crow call.  Some heavy duty turkey loads and a facemask are all he needs now (unless he’s outfitted himself with those too, in which case he’s golden).  I, of course, have much more in the way of turkey vest-cluttering debris that I have to attempt to pack out there, but who knows, maybe this trip will make me a more lithe and sensibly outfitted turkey hunter.

But not likely.

The 2014 Turkey Odyssey Begins Today

In reviewing past posts to this forum I’ve noticed a distinct trend.

The last few years, right around February, I start to go stir-crazy and begin writing about turkey hunting.  I write about preparations, I write about memories, and I write about the malaise and madness that precedes any turkey season in my household.

And this year it will be no different.  Except that it will be different, and here’s why.

This year I’ll be pursuing the second bird in my goal of harvesting a Grand Slam, as I go after a Merriam’s turkey in southeastern British Columbia.  This all came together earlier this week, and it has been the dominant thought in my brain ever since.

From a hunter’s perspective, this is going to be my ‘trip of a lifetime’ to date.  I have been fortunate enough to have a lifelong friend (we’ll call him Chris, because that is his name) who is currently living in the Kootenay region, and he’s an avid sportsman.  Once I made the connection between his location and the availability of Merriam’s turkeys in his part of the country, it was just a matter of time before I finagled my way into a turkey hunt with him.  Chris has been a lifelong angler, and in the last few years made the leap into the hunting fraternity.  That he has harvested more deer in that short time than I have in a lifetime doesn’t grate on me at all.  But, you see, despite his successes on whitetails and his enjoyment of upland bird hunting, Chris has never turkey hunted and this is where the adventure takes on another dimension.  I absolutely want to harvest one of those dark, hardy mountain birds with the ivory-tipped tails; I want it in a way that I haven’t felt in a long time.  But as anyone who has chased gobblers knows, there is also a keen desire to introduce others to the ecstatic joys and crippling defeats of turkey hunting and that’s what I intend to do for Chris.

From my personal perspective as a writer it is a veritable gold mine of inspiration.  The process of booking the trip, assembling the gear, packing, tracking down licenses and tags, transporting the weapons, the committing to memory and documenting of the unique beauty of that part of Canada, and ultimately the hunt itself will be fodder for post after post on this humble corner of the internet.  If my fingertips could salivate at the prospect of so much writing, they would.

For those unfamiliar with the Grand Slam concept, it is the harvesting of all four sub-species of wild turkey. The sub-species in question are the Eastern, of which I’ve shot a handful now, the Merriam’s, which lives in pine-covered, mountainous Western regions, the Rio Grande found throughout the west and mid-west United States, and the Osceola, a bird localized only to the Florida peninsula.  Only the Merriam’s and the Eastern inhabit Canada, so there’s a special sub-category of Grand Slam called a Canadian Slam, that to date has only been claimed to have been completed by seven people.  If I can tag a Merriam’s I’m one step closer that select club.  But the history of Grand Slams and their relative ease or difficulty is a tale for another time.

The key thing is I’m going.  Convincing my employer, and more importantly my spouse, took some doing, as I am unbelievably busy with the former and often at odds about hunting trips with the latter.  But this is a limited time opportunity, and I just had to make it happen.  My dad has always said that there may come in a time in a man’s life when he reflects on the past, and the worst thing to have to do is to sit and regret a life’s opportunities not taken. With that said, since I have the means, the time, and the desire, there is literally no reason not to book the flight and get out there.

Chris and I have already had a few chats about this trip, and aside from the chance to travel and share the Kootenays with a friend who not only stood at my wedding, but one who also got shamelessly drunk with me on several occasions in our rebellious teen years, and who has known me literally since pre-school, the greater excitement is in getting him geared up and ready to go.  As shown in previous posts, I am a confessed gearhead and nowhere do I have more goodies, toys, gadgets, and accessories than in my turkey vest.  Since I have accumulated this small fortune of equipment organically over the last eight years I hardly expect my comrade in arms to gear up completely in just a few months.  But for anyone starting out as a turkey hunter, as I told my friend, a box call, a locator call of some sort, a face mask, and some turkey-specific shotgun shells is enough gear to start out nicely.  A box call is the easiest interface by far to make convincing turkey sounds, and a good crow call can be used at almost any hour of the hunt to prospect for gobblers.  The utility of a good face mask goes without saying; ditto for reliable shotgun shells.

Then we just need birds.

I’m not particularly sure as to the relative abundance or scarcity of turkeys in Chris’s area, but he’s indicated that he’s got a line on a few likely spots.  Public land is in abundance by all accounts, and in some rudimentary topographic map research I’ve done seems to point to mixed upland forests interspersed with clearings as one of the more dominant terrain features.  There are spots in the area that just have the look of a gobbler’s haunt, and the hope is to get a scout/hunt in on the Friday afternoon when I arrive, then just hitting the woods hard for up to three days before my return flight late on the Monday.  Reviewing the terrain has also opened my eyes to the sheer ruggedness of the area.  For an Ontarian flat-lander like me, this is truly a high country hunt, and even though there is much higher country even further to the west of this trip’s home base, I imagine there will be some up and down climbs required to get onto birds.  For my part, I’ve been hitting the treadmill since my tolerance for climbing mountainsides and delving into valleys could be politely described as ‘inadequate’ after a deer season and Christmastime that was filled with rich meals and plenty of liquid celebrations.

Like everything else in my life, my goal is to embarrass myself as little as possible and vomiting from exertion in front of one of friends is not on bucket list.  So that’s the plan.  Stay tuned for updates as I stroke milestones of the list.  Next up, wrangling a travel case for my shotgun.  Perhaps a bit of a test-and-compare piece for my next post.

So come April, I’ll be opening up this year’s turkey season in Ontario in late April, and then part way through May I’ll be running to BC for this hunting smash up with a chum.  Birds notwithstanding I am already anticipating four epic days of laughs, scenic vistas, good eats, and plenty of time afield, and I look forward to putting all those memories in here.

Because creating memories and sharing the hunt with friends and family is what it is all about when I get right down to it.

Hunting for Therapy

When the phone rang at 4:15 in the morning, I knew it was bad news.  Those phone calls mean someone either passed away or that someone had just had a baby.  I didn’t know anyone who was pregnant.
What I did know, however, was that my mother was approaching the inevitable end of a four-year battle with bone cancer.  With recovery not an option and treatments being more than she could endure, she had recently chosen to cease treatment and had been admitted into a local hospice center, where things were certainly not looking good.  When I heard my father’s voice on the other end of the phone, I knew to expect the next words.  Mom had gone in the night, peacefully and with Dad at her bedside.  We talked briefly about the plans for the day, and agreed to meet later in the morning as a family.  I presume Dad then called my brother and anyone else he was going to relay the news to while my wife and I shared a quiet cry.
Later that day, after collecting all of Mom’s personal items from her hospice room and thanking the staff at Hospice Simcoe (an organization that by the way should be top priority for any and all charitable donations going forward…they are simply amazing) we gathered back at the house as a family and just reflected on the past and future.  I can’t recall if it was me or Dad that broached the issue, but somewhere along the line we agreed that a turkey hunt the next morning would be therapeutic; if for no other reason than to have some solitude in the woods to reflect on everything we had been through both individually and as a family.  Mom had been adamant in her final days that life should go on, and like most in her situation I presume, she only wanted the lives of the people she loved to be full of joy and the things they loved.  She was a miracle that way.  Although she never hunted, she made it a top priority that her husband and her kids had every chance to partake in the tradition, primarily because (as she said) she saw that we loved it and she saw how close it made the family.
So with that it was settled and I pulled into my parent’s driveway at 4:45am the next day.  Dad was already outside waiting with his gear and we hustled down the road to where we going to hunt.  The faintest sliver of dim daylight was starting to creep across the eastern horizon, but it was as dank as possible under the canopy of hardwoods and evergreens.  I had heard some gobblers in this chunk of woods twice before in the season, and I had laid eyes on the two long-bearded culprits the week before when they appeared out a misty, drizzly morning and skirted my decoy and calling at 100 yards.  They had been with two hens, and even though I pleaded with them at first and then subsequently tried to start a fight with the boss hen, they weren’t having anything to do with me that day.  Now I was back, and although in a completely different frame of mind, I was still hoping to take one of those tom gobblers back to my oven.
In the pre-dawn I set up facing north and with a gentle breeze blowing across my face I watched the field and forest edges in front of me turn from grey to silver to gold as the sun crept up to my right.  It was a calm, still morning and even though there was a slight breeze, there was nary a leaf to rustle: much of the forest was still in the early stages of budding green.  At a quarter to six in the morning, I snapped a nice photo of my setup before starting my tree-calling and fly down sequence.
The whines, purrs, clucks, and yelps from my slate wafted out over the field and the acoustics of my set up were near-perfect.  As I stepped up my calling into fly-down cackles and some plain yelps, I could hear the slightest echo from the trees in front of me, and as though my calling was nature’s alarm clock, the woods around me sprung to life.  Almost on cue the crows hammered in the distance, mallards chatted and gabbled on an unseen pond, red-winged blackbirds serenaded me, a pair of geese circled low in front, and then to the right and far back behind me I heard a gobbler.  Then I heard the other.  I couldn’t stifle the smile: those two longbeards were still in this block.  Ten minutes after that I heard soft steps on the trail twenty steps behind me, and I put both hands on my gun, hoping to shortly be drawing a bead on a red turkey head.  I purred and softly yelped to my unseen quarry and was shocked at the response I received.  Instead of a chorus of gobbling turkeys, a deer began snorting to my left.  This was coincidentally my downwind side.  Seconds later two deer popped out into the field at thirty-five yards and continued to look my way and snort at me for a full two minutes.  At the same time another deer popped up on my right and trotted out to stand broadside in one of my shooting lanes, where the handsome animal stared directly at me and stomped its foot repeatedly.  Eventually the trio of whitetails grew bored of this and moved off down the field, but I was certain that I was ‘made’ to any turkeys in the area.  I cutt hard on my mouth call and did some aggressive yelping.  Not hearing a response, I was sure that the deer had spooked the birds and that I was just pissing in the wind…figuratively that is.
Feeling busted, I just sat there listening to the wilderness and thinking about Mom.  Life had already changed so much since she had been diagnosed in 2009, and my oldest son who had been born that same year had grown up into a boy that had known a grandmother that couldn’t play with him, couldn’t pick him up, couldn’t even bathe or put him to bed.  That she loved him utterly was obvious, and she spoiled him even more as a way of compensating…which was fine.  For me, I was struck by the unfairness of the whole thing, and not feeling sorry for myself but for the life’s potential that the disease had taken from my mother, I admittedly went rapidly through several stages of grief all at once.  Simultaneously I was sad, angry, and utterly exhausted.  I shed a few soft tears, and tried to make sense of it all, the whole time knowing that at the very least my mother’s suffering, which at times had been intensely difficult, had come to an end.  Life going forward was going to be even more drastically changed; my youngest son, just barely a year old, would not have any impactful memories of my mother at all, and knowing that had torn her up.  She had often in the last weeks of her life ordered me to make sure my youngest son knew how much she loved him, knew what kind of person she was, and knew her story.  Both my wife and I had promised her over and over again that we wouldn’t shirk our duties on that front.
Now I can’t pretend to know how long it was that I sat there like that or where in my mind I was when it happened, but I casually looked to my left and was shocked to see three turkeys running, or more accurately, sprinting across the field at a distance in excess of two-hundred yards.  They were making for the tree line opposite to me, and instinctively I just cackled and yelped as loud as I could on my Woodhaven Copperhead mouth call.  All three stopped like they had hit a wall and two of the three gobbled.  It was those longbeards, and at first glance they seemed to be accompanied by a hen.  I yelped and cutt again and the toms went into strut.  Instantly, all the anger and grief went onto a shelf and all I could think about was drawing those tricksters in to my gun barrel.
But again I was to be outwitted by a bird that is utterly perfect in its wariness.  Despite having a brain the size of two almonds, both of those birds did not like the looks of the setup.  Maybe it was that my decoy wasn’t moving, maybe it was because the calling was emanating from a thicket twenty yards away from the fraudulent hen, or maybe they had just played this game a couple of more times than I had.  Whatever the reason, the two toms strutted and gobbled and spun perpendicular to my shotgun bead at a distance of eighty or ninety yards, and once they reached a hilltop directly opposite me they just stood there hammering double gobbles and looking gorgeous in the rising sun.  They shone like iridescent beacons on top of that knoll and for a few moments I was oblivious to the other turkey that was with them.  But then I caught it moving and with a slow tilt of my head I could see that it was not a hen.  It was a jake that had been running with the two toms, and he was sneaking in closer and closer to my decoy.  Each time the gobblers would hammer out a call the jake would stop and look their way before taking another three or four slow steps my way.  Deciding that the gobblers would soon run this juvenile pretender off, I resolved on the spot to lure the jake in.  Yelping and clucking softly I coaxed him to within sixty yards, at which point he gobbled like a donkey and broke into a half-strut run for my decoy.  I took my eyes off him and looked in anticipation to the two toms…surely they would be making a beeline for my set up now.  Shockingly they hadn’t moved from their spot on the knoll.
The jake meanwhile had made a large circle around my setup and was now approaching from my left at a distance of what I thought was about forty yards.  He was alternating between half-strut and full periscope and I made his stub of a beard out against the background.  Four steps later he entered my shooting lane with his head upright and angled slightly forward.  My 870 barked and I saw his head whip back around behind his left wing as the load of Federal #6 shot carried out its assignment.  He began to flop and shed feathers and as the longbeards made a cackling, hasty exit to stage left I strode out to retrieve and tag him.  It was a longer walk than I had anticipated and at forty-eight steps I had my boot heel on his neck.  My trusted 870 had sent the Federal Mag-Shok #6’s through an HS Undertaker, and that trio had more than done the job.  I counted more than a dozen holes in the bird’s head and wattles, and when he was plucked there were another dozen pellet holes under the feathers in his neck.  I slung the bird over my shoulder, went back to my seat under a tree, and affixed my tag to the turkey’s leg.  I sighed and exhaled a deep breath.  Did I feel better?  Not really.  Killing a turkey doesn’t bring my Mom back.  But the kill is the measure of success that for better or worse all hunters are gauged against, and I was certainly satisfied with the hunt.  To say there was a maelstrom of emotions would be an understatement.  I still don’t understand everything I felt in those moments after tagging that bird.
Now before I go any further, I can hear all sorts of scoffing experts and purists preparing diatribes and emails, but let me pre-empt you by saying the following.  I hunt for meat first and the fact that I have some wild turkey meat to enjoy more than offsets your misgivings that I shot a juvenile, or that maybe I further educated those two cagey longbeards by whacking their pal while they watched on, or that I could have been more patient and perhaps those two strutters would have come in after all.  I don’t hunt for ‘perhaps’ or ‘maybes’…I hunt turkeys.  A legal gobbler is just that, and now he resides comfortably trussed and picked in my freezer.  You go ahead and write your objections down and send them my way…I assure you I’ll give them all the due diligence I afford to the other baseless objections forwarded by the critics in my life.
I met up with Dad and although he said that he had hoped it was a longbeard over my shoulder, he was still smiling and eager to take pictures and hear the story.  Dad has never been above shooting a tasty jake either.  He had heard the gobbling, heard the shot, and had eventually made his way towards me when he was sure that the gobblers were not headed his way.  We took some pictures and in half-whispers recounted the story before heading home.  Dad was still itching to do some more hunting but I was done for the day.  We can only shoot one bird a day in Ontario, and my son’s pre-school fundraiser was less than hour away.  Dad planned to head out to the county forests of Tiny Township, but I needed to get back to a shower.
I dropped Dad off at home and called my wife to let her know the story because like most hunters’ wives she delights in hearing the embellished recounting of my exploits in the wilderness.  Now my wife could be described as more ‘spiritual’ than me, or whatever term you want to use to describe someone who believes in heaven and the after-life, and she is utterly certain that everything that happened that morning was orchestrated by my Mom.  Now I don’t know about that, but then again I don’t know everything either.  Arguably it was one of the best hunts I’ve ever been on.  Everything was essentially perfect from the setting, to the sights and sounds, to the unlikely appearance of my quarry, down to the ultimate pull of the trigger.  All will be etched on my memory so long as I have one.  I suppose the question remains; will it be memorable because Mom made it that way, or will it memorable because I make it that way to honour Mom?  I guess it doesn’t matter because as with all matters of faith and spirituality and like all things associated with life and death there is a mystery in it.  And usually by the time you get to know the secret (if there is one) you’re gone and you are unable to share it.
But for all the moments, both timeless and bittersweet, that lead up to that jake turkey lying at my feet, the most important is that I was there because before Mom died she told me I had to keep doing what I loved above all else.  Because oftentimes doing what you love and honouring the wishes of those who went before you is the only way to get through the hard times.

One-Hundred-and-Thirteen Days

So after an extended hiatus, I’m back.  That isn’t to say that I was not actively writing in the interim, but sadly, none of what I hacked out on the keyboard made it onto this forum.  Why, you may ask?  It just wasn’t good enough in my opinion and some of the writing was downright awful.  There was one promising piece of political vitriol aimed at pretty much everyone in the wake of late-December’s school shooting south of the border, but that didn’t pass the “overnight test”.
Anyhow, here we are in 2013 and I’m of renewed vigour.  2012 is ancient history now, and all the trials and tribulations (as well as the joys) have been filed away for nostalgic review only.  Moving forward, it is time to focus on what matters.  Since all the hunting seasons (barring a couple I don’t really participate in) are closed, the next point of business for me is turkey hunting, which is less than four months away.  That may not seem so close, but it is, and there is oh so much to do.  I’m in the market for some new turkey decoys, I’m always down for buying a new call or two, and now that I’m living in an area where I have significantly more access to local hunting (of both the public and private variety) I’m keen to spend the next few months scouting and getting familiar with the territory.
So what am I thinking?  Well first and foremost, I’ve gone a long time without doing a “Gearhead” post, primarily because I’m fully outfitted from a gear perspective (or I was until I realized I wasn’t…) so once I do some shopping I’ll be putting another one of those out there.  I’ll probably be doing a little light coyote hunting as well, so barring another round of abject failure, I just may have some tales from the woods on that front too.
In terms of the ancient history that made up 2012, our crew had a solid deer season with my Dad connecting on a nice 8-point during the first week of the season (with that deer being the first one to be shot on the family farm it was even more memorable) while my two cousins and my brother all shot deer in the second week.  One of the other fellas in camp for the second week shot a real bruiser as well, while a fifth deer fell to another gun in our group.  So suffice it to say, there’s a whole pile of venison coming my way, which I frankly can’t be more happy about…my stores were depleted you see.  Some of my friends and acquaintances were still out chasing deer until the bitter end on December 31st, while others were swamping around after late-season ducks and geese right up until Boxing Day.  I salute all your respective efforts, but it was way too dang cold for me by December 10th.
I was able to spend an afternoon at the range last month, which was pleasant, although it troubled me only slightly to see other people shoot my guns in a much more proficient manner than I, but what can you do?  A fringe benefit of going to the range is having to buy more ammunition, which requires additional online ballistics research.  It’s been safe to say that I’ve been doing a lot of time over at Hornady’s home page reading about ft-lbs and retained energy.  All my ballistics studies have almost convinced me to buy another rifle…almost.
But none of that detracts from what is coming in one-hundred-and-thirteen days.  I only made one New Year’s resolution this year, and that was to not break my leg again (or the other one, or any other major bones, for that matter) so that I can make up for all the turkey hunting I missed last year when I went down with injury.  Last year seemed to have a freakishly high number of perfect turkey hunting mornings, and I was unfortunate enough to witness them all from a supine position as I was essentially in traction for the whole of April and most of May.  The two days that I limped out and sat for two and three hours respectively were not ‘perfect mornings’ with one being unbelievably mosquito-infested and the other being interrupted by a farmer tilling the one field I had permission to hunt.  But hope springs eternal this year, and it is the plan to hunt as many full days as it takes to tag out on a gobbler.  My wife is already sick of me practicing my slate calling, and it is only going to get worse for her from there.  That reminds me…I need a new facemask as well.  Oh the joys of the turkey hunter’s pre-season.
So that’s what is coming for 2013, more pining for turkey hunting, more lusting after equipment, and more general nonsense from me.  For those of you who are subscribed to this blog or following on Twitter (@getoutandgohunt) I thank you for playing along for another year.  Hopefully I’ll be able to bring some entertainment for 2013.