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No Spurs??

Started by PASTRUTTER21, May 24, 2015, 10:37:51 AM

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snapper1982

Killed one last year in Kansas with no spurs. He was a boss with 6 hens and gobbled his head off.

Dtrkyman

I have seen 200 plus dead turkeys and never a spurless one!

wbpc

I killed 2 last year that was spurless. I have killed several others with no spurs also. Could be a genetic trait not sure but most of them have came from the same property.

Tail Feathers

I had one on my hunting lease that had no spurs.  I got some great close up shots of him, he actually would chase my truck!  Got some pics at 6 feet as he strutted around my pickup, not a spur one.
He had lots of girlfriends, I expect to see more spurless birds since he probably passed those genes on.  I know he made three years old, maybe older.  I didn't see him this season, figure he bought the farm somehow.
Love to hunt the King of Spring!

BoWhoop

Quote from: Gooserbat on May 24, 2015, 03:18:52 PM
Last year had a buddy who killed a spurles bird only to kill a double spur tom a couple weeks later.

Sounds fair!  If that's the case, I'm due a couple double spurs!

"I killed 2 last year that was spurless. I have killed several others with no spurs also. Could be a genetic trait not sure but most of them have came from the same property."  wbpc

Yeah, I'd say that's genetics, BAD genetics! 

chcltlabz

I killed a spurless bird in South Dakota a few years ago, but he was banded, so that made up for it.  Our group killed another bird that same week that was spurless, and we've killed a couple others from the same location. 

Killed a bird this year with 1 spur, but the other was broken off flush with the leg and healed over.  That had to hurt!
A veteran is someone who, at one point, wrote a blank check made payable to 'The United States of America' for an amount of 'up to and including their life.'
   
That is Honor, and there are way too many people in this country who no longer understand it.

Dr Juice

Wow. I never experienced that one, but I did kill a double spur on both legs once. Congrats.

slamman

this big ol Gould's we took in Arizona this year had no signs of spurs on either leg.




neal

I've seen it quite a few times but honestly the place I've seen it most is FL nothing to it I'm sure.
Hooks Custom Calls Prostaff member


NWTF Diamond life member, Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Life Member, NWTF Nationals Hunting Call Competition Judge, Hooks custom calls striker builder, WI, MN & IA State Friction Calling Champion.

crappieangler

I've killed a 2 or 3 spurless merriams on the same farm. I assumed it was genetics. But this year I shot one and you can wiggle the spurs like a loose tooth. I feel like I could pull them right off the leg.... I've also killed one with a pretty large spur and another with a very small spur that hadn't been damaged off this same farm. Maybe there's something to do with a nutritional deficiency or something? I'd lean more on genetics though.

huntmaster80

wow that is a beautiful goulds!!

PASTRUTTER21

Thank you for all the feedback. Regardless it was a great hunt with my dad and one I will always remember. Great year and can't wait until next season already!!!

BoWhoop

Quote from: PASTRUTTER21 on May 29, 2015, 09:42:23 PM
Thank you for all the feedback. Regardless it was a great hunt with my dad and one I will always remember. Great year and can't wait until next season already!!!

That is the right attitude!  Couple stories if you don't mind...

My first one was memorable as well.  I had come back North to our hunting camp in VA and my wife had come South to meet me with the kids.  I took my oldest son, 6 at the time, out scouting on a Sunday morning since we couldn't hunt Sundays in VA then.  I got a gobbler to respond way across a clear cut, creek, up on a ridge.  My son (whitelightning or something like that on here) and I closed the distance and I told him to call while I videoed.  I had had him practice with one of those Ben Lee Aluminum Groove friction calls.  He hit that high pitched thing and that bird lit up!  He let me coach him while calling and he got that bird so close that when we went back to the cabin and looked at the video, I realized that bird had NO SPURS.

Next day, took a cousin of mine from CA.  He borrowed my gun and I tried to tell him where it shot, (pretty much straight!) but he had no chance to shoot it before the hunt.  Back to the same area, call a bird in and he whiffs.  Regardless whether it looks like a clean miss or hit, I HAVE to do my CSI s$&t.  After a little while my cousin comes up "Did you hear that bird gobble?"  "Uh, no." (Skeptical) 

We move back to the area he shot and sure enough, that bird or another is gobbling.  I proceed to call that one in, right in front of his gun and for whatever reason he does not see it!  It freaking gobbling and directly in front of us!  I'm on the right, it goes to my right, but my gun is in my lap as I wasn't planning on shooting.  Finally it sees me broadside on the tree and flushes, I struggle to get the gun up left handed and fold it.  Turns out it was the same spurless bird my kid had called up the day before!  I'll be honest, I didn't feel cheated by the no spurs as I had just finished what my kid had started the day before.

The other spurless one came to calling in a creek bottom in my favorite place in SC.  I was leaning up against the most comfortable root ball ever.  This one (like most) got to my right and I was practically laying down on my right side when I shot...never thinking how this might affect where the shot goes.  All I can tell you is it is best to have your gun vertical if that is how you patterned it!  He took off to my right and got down in a creek.  I took off running and when I got to the edge of the creek I saw him laying on the sand.  I bailed off the bank and dropped about 10 feet (I was younger then) and landed right beside that bird.  He jumped up and spurred me hard right in the chest knocking me backwards!  Again, I was not bummed the bird I had shot had NO SPURS!

Long Spurs and Beards and Heavy Birds are cool, but they aren't necessary to make a hunt memorable.