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What to Do When the Gobbler Knows More with Matt Morrett

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Editor’s Note: Matt Morrett of Linglestown, Pennsylvania, works for Zink Calls (www.zinkcalls.com) and Avian X Decoys (https://www.avian-x.com). Matt won the Junior and Senior Grand National Turkey Calling contests, and the World Friction Turkey Calling Championships five times. He was only 16-years old when he won his first World Turkey Calling Championship.

I was fortunate to grow up in Pennsylvania, when we didn’t have many turkeys to hunt. I learned that if I found a turkey that gobbled in the spring, and he was away from other hunters, he might be the only gobbler I had to hunt all spring. However, today, turkey hunters can cover a lot of country and have several turkeys to hunt in one morning. I’ve often been asked, “Matt, what do you do when you’ve missed a turkey, spooked a gobbler or hunted him so hard and so long that he quits gobbling?” My answer to that question is, “If you only have one turkey to hunt, hunt him until the end of the season, or until he rides home with you in the back of your pickup truck.”

I learned early in my turkey-hunting career that the easiest way to consistently bag a gobbler is to learn where the turkey roosts, where he goes throughout the day, why he goes there, and where he flies up at night to return to the roost. I never consider a day of turkey hunting a loss, if I’m learning more about the gobbler I’m hunting.

Tough turkeys are the best teachers of how to hunt turkeys. You’ll soon realize that your greatest chance for success always will be when you know what the turkey wants to do, where he wants to go, and why he wants to go there, even before the turkey makes those decisions for himself. Most of the gobblers harvested today are taken because we make the gobbler do what we want him to do, especially early in the season, if the turkey hasn’t had any hunting pressure and hasn’t heard other hunters calling to him.

When we’re hunting 2-year-old gobblers, and they’re fired-up, we can make those young turkeys do pretty much what we want them to do. But after a turkey has been shot at and missed, spooked by other hunters and heard enough turkey calls to be able to tell you the manufacturer’s name on that call, he’s one of the toughest game animals to take. He probably knows more about what you’re going to do than you know about what he’s planning to do. I’m not saying turkeys are smarter than we are. But they’ve adapted their habits to stay away from danger. Often, the only way to harvest those ole smart turkeys is to be where that turkey wants to be and be in that spot before he gets there. Eventually, I know I can take that turkey.

Often, the best call when you’re hunting a tough, well-educated gobbler is no call. When one of those bad birds hears you call, he knows where you are, who you are, and what you plan to do to him. Experience has taught him not to go to that type of calling. He knows if what he hears is a turkey hen, then she’ll come to him, and he won’t be required to go to her. Instead of cutting and loud yelping, I’ll go to the spot where that tom wants to be and cutt and yelp softly. Occasionally, I’ll scratch in the leaves and act like I’m a hen feeding, or a new hen he hasn’t heard before, and I’m not really interested in him.

To learn more about turkey hunting, check out John E. Phillips’s book, “Turkey Hunting Tactics,” available in Kindle and print at http://amzn.to/WkbUE9 and from Audible at https://www.audible.com/pd/B01COORUU2/?source_code=AUDFPWS0223189MWT-BK-ACX0-054884. To get a free eBook, “The Turkey Gobbler Getter Manual,” go to https://www.dropbox.com/sh/ps7hp9vdlek764m/AACP4EjpWIPxf8azkeWajvsMa?dl=0.

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