Turkey season opener 2026

hunt0168

Well-known member
Took the day off from work to enjoy myself on a beautiful (yet frosty) morning. I went to one of my coyote properties that I had seen turkeys tracks during the winter and knew some birds were around. As I was waiting for the skies to get a little brighter before ripping a howl on my diaphragm, a real coyote howled a couple hundred yards away, and to my good fortune a bird gobbled just about 100 yards across the pasture from where I was standing! I’m in a 2 acre woodlot surrounded by a pasture on all sides. This bird was roosted on the opposite side of the narrowest corner. What luck!

Well this coyote starts howling and booger barking and 3 birds start firing off gobbles. Perfect! Now to find my setup and see what happens. I setup around the corner from where they were roosted thinking my yelps and purrs wouldn’t do me much good if there wasn’t a bird in sight making them. I had to make them come look for me.

As dawn broke and legal shooting time arrived I let out some tree yelps and got 4 gobblers answering back. I heard one pitch off but couldn’t see it. A few more tree yelps and then a flydown cackle from me and they all fired off again. Then one by one I heard more pitch off. They hit the ground gobbling. I heard a hen yelping in with the boys and they were really hammering to her. I went into my usual routine of working on the hen to see if I could drag her in with her group of fanciers. To my dismay they sounded like they were getting further away.

Don’t panic.. Stay in the game. I let out some yelps on both my diaphragm as well as my pot call and they answered. Then I went quiet. They gobbled, and gobbled, and for good measure, gobble some more. I just threw out a few random clucks and purrs for the next half hour or so, and every once in awhile one of them would gobble back. At about the one hour mark I see a hen rounding the corner. And then a string of 4 toms that all had short beards. Oh, c’mon!.. Well they’re coming and suddenly the lead “Jake” goes into full strut. That’s no Jake! Thats a perfect full fan. And the rest went into strut with the same. Ahhh… Bad winter and deep snow had cropped their beards. Okay, game on again.

As I sat with gun rested on my knee, the hen walked past at 20 yards. 20 yards behind her was a group of 4 in tow. As the lead gobbler that was doing most of the strutting walked into my red dot I squeezed the trigger and watched my bird crumple without a twitch. The rest departed and I sat there giving thanks for my successful hunt. About then my bird did the turkey to heaven flight while lying on his back. About 10 seconds later all was quiet again.

Classic 2 year old. About 3/4” spurs and a busted off 3” beard. I’d guess him at 17-18 lbs. I’m happy with it.

I have a second tag I can fill during the season, but the last few years I have limited myself to only one bird. Numbers have been slipping for a bunch of years now. And the winters have been tough on them. Always hopeful for a good breeding season and a nice comeback.

Thanks for reading. Good luck to those that get after them.

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As I was waiting for the skies to get a little brighter before ripping a howl on my diaphragm, a real coyote howled a couple hundred yards away, and to my good fortune a bird gobbled just about 100 yards across the pasture from where I was standing! I’m in a 2 acre woodlot surrounded by a pasture on all sides. This bird was roosted on the opposite side of the narrowest corner. What luck!

Decisions, decisions! Thought there for a minute we were going to hear of a strange double. :ROFLMAO: WTG, Bob. (y)(y)
 
Decisions, decisions! Thought there for a minute we were going to hear of a strange double. :ROFLMAO: WTG, Bob. (y)(y)
Unfortunately, Clarence, here in NY, coyotes have a season. I have to suffer through 6 months without coyotes unless one of my farmers needs me to eliminate a problem. I’m confident that I’m familiar with this particular coyote. Towards the end of the coyote season I had it fired up a few times exactly where it ripped off this morning. I’m sure it’s a den site. Seed for next season! :devilish:
 
Outstanding Bob! First day and you're done already :ROFLMAO: now it's back to grousing there's nothing to do....:LOL:
My buddy and I were out but we were reminded that it's not as easy as some might believe. Got busted right off when we parked under some roosting birds. Next spot we talked to a few but they were already hooked up with hens and they were sticking with what they had. Tomorrow is another day.
 
Congrats!! A perfect hunt…make them hunt you and when you can see them they’re already in range!! Play the hen and most of the time she’ll lead the boys straight to your lap!!
 
Thanks guys. It was a really nice morning for sure. Kinda wish the beard wasn’t rotted off, but it is what it is. It’s not the first time I’ve seen it. I like to make hangers for my display collection from the spurs and beards. I save them in the freezer for a few seasons then do batches all at once. I have a bunch to do now so when my wife gives me a day off I’ll have something to keep me occupied lol… Here’s some in the works and on display in my garage/butcher shop/bar/hangout spot. I do everything but park my truck out there! 🤣
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Very impressive, Bob, but I want to hear the story behind the arrow through the tree limb. :ROFLMAO:
Yes, yes, yes..... do tell Bob :ROFLMAO:
Well… I was in my tree stand that was at the base of a steep embankment that was covered in whatever that particular woody brush is called when I hear a grunt from atop the embankment. It was pushing the last minutes of shooting light so like any good deer hunter, I grunted back. A deer came crashing down the embankment towards me breaking brush as it charged in. It stopped at the base of the embankment still within the shrubbery. It was the largest DOE I had seen in long while and I had doe tags to fill so I let an arrow fly through the basketball sized hole exposing her vitals. Well if you’ve read a few of my crazier hunts here on PM, you know that I’m pretty awesome for the most part 🤣, but on occasion things go sideways. I heard a nice solid THWACK! And she spun and ran back up the embankment and disappeared. Seconds later she ran back down the embankment about 80 yards east of me and again out of sight. I didn’t get a warm fuzzy feeling after seeing the distance she ran and continued to do so. I climbed down to take a look at the shot location to find my arrow through that sapling. The broadhead end was missing, and upon closer inspection there was hair on the end of the shaft with about 10” of shaft missing. I went back to the last spot I saw the deer and found blood. I wanted to give her a little time so I went to the house. I was hunting right behind my house by the way. I told my wife what happened and she gave the latest update on the weather. She said “we’re minutes away from getting a hellacious dumping of snow!” Silly me… I knew this and that was the driving force to get out there. To hunt ahead of the incoming front. I rushed back out there and tracked her up. She went a total of about 50 yards from where I had last seen her. The kicker here was about 25 yards before I found her, a deer busted out of a thicket right to my right. I caught a glimpse of antler and he was gone. Seconds later I found her. As I was dressing her out the snow came down. By the time I dragged her to the house we had over 3” of snow on the ground!

My thought is that she was hot but not ready to stand. That buck was probably the same one that initially grunted and then followed her and bedded nearby waiting for her to get up and play. That obviously didn’t happen.
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Now that's a HOM candidate IMO! Good job on following up and getting the job done. Great story and writeup, thanks Bob, thanks for sharing.
 
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