Reply to thread

Howls are trickier for me too.  I have to position the diaphragm further back on my tongue and apply more tongue pressure and more air than the distress call.  Try making some loud barks.  Just apply a bunch of pressure and air.   Once you get that, you can feel what it takes for tongue pressure and position.  Took me a while to get the sounds I wanted from a diaphragm call, but worth the effort.  Definitely my most versatile calls. Practice will make it happen for you.


Just reread your question.  Since you are already getting a howl, just try to keep your tongue pressure constant.  You'll get it with a little time.


Back
Top