SUBSCRIBE NOW SUBSCRIBE NOW SUBSCRIBE NOW SUBSCRIBE NOW
Game & Fish
HUNTING | FISHING | STATE-BY-STATE | SPECIES | MARKETPLACE
 
advertisement
 
You Are Here:  Game & Fish >> Michigan >> Hunting >> Turkey Hunting
 
RELATED STORIES
The Turkey/Water Connection
You'll be a better gobbler chaser when you understand the relationship between turkeys and the water sources -- or lack of them -- on the property you hunt. (March 2006) ... [+] Full Article
>> Michigan’s Spring Turkey Outlook
>> Portable Blind Tactics For Spring Turkeys
>> 10 Tips For Taking Trophy Longbeards
>> Michigan Sportsman Home
 
 
OUR FAVORITES

Get A Grip On Frog-Lure Fishing!

[+] MORE
>> Top Fishing Lures For 2008
>> 5 Great Catfish Baits
>> Power Tactics For Papermouths
>> Flashers & Flies Fit For Kings
 
RELATED HUNTING
North American Whitetail
North American Whitetail
A magazine designed for the serious trophy-deer hunter. [+] See It
>> Petersen's Hunting
>> Petersen's Bowhunting
>> Wildfowl
>> Gun Dog
 
RELATED FISHING
Shallow Water Angler
Shallow Water Angler
The nation's only publication dedicated to inshore fishing, covering waters from Texas to Maine. [+] See It
>> In-Fisherman
>> Florida Sportsman
>> Fly Fisherman
>> Game & Fish
>> Walleye In-Sider
 
RELATED SHOOTING
Guns & Ammo
Guns & Ammo
The preeminent firearms magazine: Hunting, shooting, cowboy action, reviews, technical material and more. [+] See It
>> Shooting Times
>> RifleShooter
>> Handguns
>> Shotgun News
Michigan Sportsman
Michigan's Spring Turkey Outlook
All indications are that many of our state's turkey hunters will be experiencing the same success this year as the author did last year when she bagged a gobbler. So how does it look in your neck of the woods in 2006? (April 2006)

My eyes were drooping as I sat against the big maple tree. The warm spring sun served only to lull me further off to dreamland. It had been a long day that had begun at 4:30 a.m. But dry, mild weather is a rarity in northern Michigan in April, and I had resolved to make the most of the opportunity Mother Nature had given me that day.

Two gobblers were out there somewhere, although neither had responded to my short series of clucks and purrs -- topped with a seductive yelp -- in the hour or so that had transpired after I spotted them moving along a wooded hillside and rushed ahead of them to "cut them off at the pass."

I wasn't surprised, because after all, this was public land, and I was certain my calls weren't the first ones these birds had heard from a hopeful turkey hunter in the last week and a half since Michigan's 2005 spring turkey season had begun.


continue article
 
 

My four previous setups that same day had been typical of what many hunters know as the game that is spring turkey hunting -- all of them hearing talkative, apparently eager gobblers, yet all of them ending with an empty game bag.

With work awaiting me at home, this would be my final attempt of the day. But with only three days left to hunt on my tag for Area J's second seven-day early season, time was running short.

It hadn't been a bad season so far, and certainly not the debacle that occurred in 2004, when extended extremely cold, windy, wintry and wet weather had kept gobblers tight-lipped and apparently totally uninterested in the opposite sex throughout Michigan's six-week season.

Three gobblers had fallen to my calls so far in 2005, one to a buddy's 12-gauge during a typical late-April snowstorm, and two to the shotguns of first-time turkey hunters now hooked on the phenomenon of spring gobbler hunting.

Now, finally, it was my turn. But except for the twittering of songbirds, the forest was quiet. But there is an old adage that is especially true among dedicated turkey hunters -- "Never say never." I fought desperately to keep my eyes open, focusing my attention on the antics of a chickadee on a nearby branch.

Suddenly a twig snapped directly behind me. A deer, I thought, as I slowly turned my head and glanced behind me. What met my eyes was the flash of a red head and the glaring stare of a dominant wild turkey tom standing 30 feet behind me.


page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
 
QUICK NAVIGATION
 
 


 
 
OUR NETWORK: IMOUTDOORS WEBSITES
[Featured Title]
Shallow Water Angler  
Shallow Water Angler
The nation's only publication devoted to inshore fishing, covering waters from Texas to Maine.
 *See the Site
*Subscribe to the magazine
[Features From Shallow Water Angler]
>> Complete the Illusion
>> Make It a Mondo Mullet
>> Solitude & Shallows - Chandeleur Island
>> South Carolina Creates Second Inshore Reef
* Subscribe to the Shallow Water Angler
[All Titles]
 >> CONTACT>> ADVERTISE>> MEDIA KIT>> JOBS>> SUBSCRIBER SERVICES>> GIVE A GIFT