Originally posted by Jerry Russell:
We carry a host of locator calls and the key is to be different but to still use the calls at the right time. A Canada goose call can be used pretty early and throughout the day. A Pileated woodpecker call is good 30 minutes after daylightlight.
If you are having no luck with a traditional crow call, raise the pitch by manipulating the reed and blow is ultra fast only three times. In other words don't sound like a crow.
We have done a ton of testing and a turkey can hear you MUCH farther than you can hear his response. We rarely if ever use locator calls that sound anything like a turkey. You can wreck a great tract of land doing that. One or two days of staggering through the woods cutting to locate can cause serious lockjaw on a property.
This is steep river canyon land so sound really carries. It also bounces, echoes or gets completely lost depending on where it's generated. The roar of the river below is also a constant source of white noise -- especially with the year we've had. So it's tough to know what gets heard and what gets lost out there. All I really know is that I had good conversations with the birds last year and not hardly a "hello" from a tom this year.
I like the canada goose idea. They're nesting in the area and one flies up or down the canyon about every hour. Haven't heard a gobble off it yet but there's that white noise issue... They're about as plentiful as the hawks.
Peacock -- never would have thought of that. There aren't any peacocks. But it's way outside the box of the turkey's experience, too.
Oddly, there aren't any crow out there either. Plenty of ravens. But no crows.
Yotes are around & they usually start howling around dusk. The main packs are back closer to the trailhead but they're undoubtedly all around. I haven't heard them gobble off the sound of the yote pack but I've only heard them in separate areas.
Good ideas to think about. Thank you for your input. I'll give these a try & report back if I have any success.