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Started by chatterbox, December 06, 2011, 05:00:09 PM
Quote from: GobbleNut on December 06, 2011, 06:05:21 PMThis depends a lot on your individual situation. Using locator calls to find birds in some situations can be critical to success. In others, it may be useless, or even detrimental. While it is true that gobblers will often gobble on their own early in the morning, if you are hunting a large area with relatively few birds, you need to cover ground to find out where they are. You do not want to spend much time at any one spot waiting for a bird to gobble on his own. In those cases, using locator calls is an invaluable asset to your scouting. In large areas with good road systems, one of the most effective ways of locating gobblers is to drive the roads at first daylight for a couple of hours, stopping every half-mile or so, or at any good-looking spot where you can hear a long ways. Turn off your vehicle, step out, blow a loud crow call a couple of quick blasts, and listen quietly for a response. If you hear a bird, mark him (if you are scouting), and move on. If you don't get a response on the first crow call, wait fifteen or twenty seconds and do it again. If you don't get a response on the second blast, jump in your vehicle and move on. You can do the same thing by walking in roadless areas, but you obviously cannot cover as much country that way.In some places, the above method is also very effective in the last half-hour before full darkness in the evening, as well. However, in some places, it is not effective at all. I have never hunted anywhere that a good, loud locator call would not elicit gobbles at the right time in the morning, however. The downside of using locators is that if you are hunting areas that get hammered by hunters using locator calls, you can alert wary gobblers by using them, and possibly shut gobblers up that would be willing to gobble otherwise.The bottom line for me is, though, that if I am hunting an unfamiliar area of any significant size, I am going to use locator calls at first light to find the birds,...and I will cover as much country as I can. I will also try them in the evening until I am convinced that they are not effective in that area.