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State Bag Limits- Too Many Or Too Few?

Started by quavers59, March 27, 2024, 04:29:41 AM

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Swampmonkey

Quote from: WLT III on February 16, 2026, 11:35:30 AM
Quote from: Swampmonkey on February 16, 2026, 09:58:08 AMNever understood the over satisfaction and self congratulations of "yeah killed that one on public". lol. Who cares?
I'll start by saying that I've been hunting local public ground way before it was cool. For me, it has not been so much public ground, but hunting pressured turkeys, rather than unpressured turkeys. I enjoy the challenge more than killing someone's pets. Plenty of private turf that is just as heavily pressured as public though
We can agree on that part. Everyone around us has about 500-50acres. If you ain't hunting him someone is

Swampmonkey

Quote from: sasquatch1 on February 16, 2026, 11:49:02 AM
Quote from: Swampmonkey on February 16, 2026, 09:58:08 AMNever understood the over satisfaction and self congratulations of "yeah killed that one on public". lol. Who cares?
Lol right

Honestly I've not killed many private birds but the ones I did kill have me more trouble than the public birds.

On public I find birds alone much more so than on private where the flocks aren't busted up.


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I've experienced the same

appalachianassassin

In my zip code, I have witnessed the turkey population spike up and down twice in the 29 years I've been hunting them. Last season I self imposed a limit of 1 in east TN. Let several go late season after I got off the road. There were several Jakes last spring and this year there is a pile of gobblers. 13 in 1 group. So yeah, I'll happily take the limit this season. Turkey populations vary and can go from pitiful to over run in just a few years.

sasquatch1

Quote from: appalachianassassin on February 16, 2026, 07:00:22 PMIn my zip code, I have witnessed the turkey population spike up and down twice in the 29 years I've been hunting them. Last season I self imposed a limit of 1 in east TN. Let several go late season after I got off the road. There were several Jakes last spring and this year there is a pile of gobblers. 13 in 1 group. So yeah, I'll happily take the limit this season. Turkey populations vary and can go from pitiful to over run in just a few years.
Agree, very cyclical and compounding population changes can happen quickly with the right/wrong conditions in both good direction and bad.

Nothing wrong with self imposed limits if one believes in it. Personally I don't think the harvest is hardly measurable on the population swings but who really knows.


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Bowguy

Quote from: sasquatch1 on February 16, 2026, 07:32:46 PM
Quote from: appalachianassassin on February 16, 2026, 07:00:22 PMIn my zip code, I have witnessed the turkey population spike up and down twice in the 29 years I've been hunting them. Last season I self imposed a limit of 1 in east TN. Let several go late season after I got off the road. There were several Jakes last spring and this year there is a pile of gobblers. 13 in 1 group. So yeah, I'll happily take the limit this season. Turkey populations vary and can go from pitiful to over run in just a few years.
Agree, very cyclical and compounding population changes can happen quickly with the right/wrong conditions in both good direction and bad.

Nothing wrong with self imposed limits if one believes in it. Personally I don't think the harvest is hardly measurable on the population swings but who really knows.


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Do you believe predators could be part of the problem? Humans are predators. How come areas you hunt, often right near where we are ,always have at least one property, the one with the no hunting signs, saturated with turkey and deer. If its local everything else us the same. 
Might be obvious to think thats where they just got pushed to but if everything else was the same the flocks, herds ought to diminish. They dont.
Something to think about.
Now understand dead is dead no matter how theyre killed. We have to have an affect I'd think

appalachianassassin

Quote from: sasquatch1 on February 16, 2026, 07:32:46 PM
Quote from: appalachianassassin on February 16, 2026, 07:00:22 PMIn my zip code, I have witnessed the turkey population spike up and down twice in the 29 years I've been hunting them. Last season I self imposed a limit of 1 in east TN. Let several go late season after I got off the road. There were several Jakes last spring and this year there is a pile of gobblers. 13 in 1 group. So yeah, I'll happily take the limit this season. Turkey populations vary and can go from pitiful to over run in just a few years.
Agree, very cyclical and compounding population changes can happen quickly with the right/wrong conditions in both good direction and bad.

Nothing wrong with self imposed limits if one believes in it. Personally I don't think the harvest is hardly measurable on the population swings but who really knows.


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Im not sure if hunters have an impact or not. Either way, I wish not to be part of the problem. That, and I prefer adventure hunts anyway.

eggshell

Quote from: Bowguy on February 17, 2026, 04:27:22 AM
Quote from: sasquatch1 on February 16, 2026, 07:32:46 PM
Quote from: appalachianassassin on February 16, 2026, 07:00:22 PMIn my zip code, I have witnessed the turkey population spike up and down twice in the 29 years I've been hunting them. Last season I self imposed a limit of 1 in east TN. Let several go late season after I got off the road. There were several Jakes last spring and this year there is a pile of gobblers. 13 in 1 group. So yeah, I'll happily take the limit this season. Turkey populations vary and can go from pitiful to over run in just a few years.
Agree, very cyclical and compounding population changes can happen quickly with the right/wrong conditions in both good direction and bad.

Nothing wrong with self imposed limits if one believes in it. Personally I don't think the harvest is hardly measurable on the population swings but who really knows.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk


Do you believe predators could be part of the problem? Humans are predators. How come areas you hunt, often right near where we are ,always have at least one property, the one with the no hunting signs, saturated with turkey and deer. If its local everything else us the same. 
Might be obvious to think thats where they just got pushed to but if everything else was the same the flocks, herds ought to diminish. They dont.
Something to think about.
Now understand dead is dead no matter how theyre killed. We have to have an affect I'd think

Birds learn where sanctuary properties are, I 100% believe pressure moves them. Back when I run bird dogs I hunted management plots for Pheasants. After about a week a plot that held 30 birds would only provide a few flushes. ODNR marked off safety no hunting zones around these plots. I would send the dogs into them and wait outside the boundary and birds would pour out of those zones, but they would rarely fly towards the legal shooting area. It would be very hard to convince me they don't learn where they are safe.

arkrem870

It's simple to think....if we didn't allow turkeys to be harvested by hunters the population would boom!  What many fail to realize is turkey are hunted by everything else - coons,coyotes,fox, bobcats, owls, hawks, eagles, snakes etc 24/7 365 and they dont just harvest males like we do.

Spring hunting for gobblers only isn't a threat to wild turkey populations with our current parameters.
LOOSE LIPS SINK SHIPS

mountainhunter1

Habitat improvement will help - but that is probably the hardest needle to move as Turkey's and turkey hunters are such a small segment of the radar for much of our nation's population.

But predators are something that all of us can do something about even if truly fixing habitat is not doable where we live and hunt. I do not have all the answers and don't pretend to. But one thing I do know - a turkey can nest and operate just find even if she has to nest in open hardwoods (and it happens as I walk up on nests in open hardwoods almost yearly), as long as something does not raid her nest. We can all kill more crows, trap more coons, possums and such. It is just a matter of do we care enough to do it.

Just a question - I have long wondered if banning TSS would make a difference in turkey hunting? I don't know and am just asking. But there is a good chance based on what I encounter in the woods on public - that if folks did not have the means to shoot birds down at 60, 70, 80 or even 90 yards - alot of them would not kill a bird and many of them would eventually give up and find something else to do. I personally would be fine being limited to lead shot only as it used to be. But I am not sure if that is the answer and am just asking for your thoughts?

"I said to the Lord, "You are my Master! Everything good thing I have comes from You." (Psalm 16:2)

Romans 6:23, Romans 10:13

Dtrkyman

Death by a thousand cuts, there is generally no smoking gun.

I hunt an area that is predator paradise, it's got em thick, but also has piles of turkeys.  Why, the habitat is incredible, build it and they will come!

Many habitat changes go under the radar, I hunted an area where I had access to a pasture for over a decade, I literally never hunted it as it never had birds.

Lost access a few years ago and it has birds in it every stinking day! The neighbor logged right next to it and the pasture has a new renter, it looks no different but things have changed!


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Bowguy

Quote from: eggshell on February 17, 2026, 07:24:36 AM
Quote from: Bowguy on February 17, 2026, 04:27:22 AM
Quote from: sasquatch1 on February 16, 2026, 07:32:46 PM
Quote from: appalachianassassin on February 16, 2026, 07:00:22 PMIn my zip code, I have witnessed the turkey population spike up and down twice in the 29 years I've been hunting them. Last season I self imposed a limit of 1 in east TN. Let several go late season after I got off the road. There were several Jakes last spring and this year there is a pile of gobblers. 13 in 1 group. So yeah, I'll happily take the limit this season. Turkey populations vary and can go from pitiful to over run in just a few years.
Agree, very cyclical and compounding population changes can happen quickly with the right/wrong conditions in both good direction and bad.

Nothing wrong with self imposed limits if one believes in it. Personally I don't think the harvest is hardly measurable on the population swings but who really knows.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk


Do you believe predators could be part of the problem? Humans are predators. How come areas you hunt, often right near where we are ,always have at least one property, the one with the no hunting signs, saturated with turkey and deer. If its local everything else us the same. 
Might be obvious to think thats where they just got pushed to but if everything else was the same the flocks, herds ought to diminish. They dont.
Something to think about.
Now understand dead is dead no matter how theyre killed. We have to have an affect I'd think

Birds learn where sanctuary properties are, I 100% believe pressure moves them. Back when I run bird dogs I hunted management plots for Pheasants. After about a week a plot that held 30 birds would only provide a few flushes. ODNR marked off safety no hunting zones around these plots. I would send the dogs into them and wait outside the boundary and birds would pour out of those zones, but they would rarely fly towards the legal shooting area. It would be very hard to convince me they don't learn where they are safe.

That is obvious but.... How come those particular flocks, herds arent decimated by predators?. Theyd (predators) all be stupid if they didnt head to the game richest property to hunt.

Shiloh

Something is definitely happening, but I don't think anyone really knows what.  It could be disease or it could be predation or it could just be that numbers spiked and have to settle at a reasonable carrying capacity.  Do what you can where you are at whether it be habitat work, trapping,trigger control, etc.....

Davyalabama

Well, I typed a response and it timed out and didn't post, oh well.

Predators, back in the day, you had guys doing it for a living, plus you had us boys and dad's running dogs for coons on Friday and Saturday nights.  Some of us adventurers, we would get into an older uncle's, granddad's, great grandad's sheds and find some old traps for coons, beaver, fox, possums and even coyotes.  Coyotes weren't as prevalent in my neck, but we did have some.  .22's and taking care of these predators, a lot of fun was had in those days.  We, ok, I didn't look at it like predator control, I was having fun!!!!!  A pelt(s) would bring money for 12 gauge shells, bricks of .22lr, even helping out with the family, not to mention maybe spending it to take a girl out.

You didn't have the government involved - name on this trap, run it everyday, blah blah blah.  Set it and check it when you could.  We didn't wait weeks or anything, but hard for a youngster to check a trap everyday and have school, after school work and or sports, family obligations and chores, etc.  Maybe getting some dad or granddad to loan us the pulpwood truck and load a cord and a half to make some serious extra money to buy traps.     

Anyone remember betting a brick of .22lr or a .7oz coke on who could load the largest piece to go on the bottom for stacking the load? 

Love the Lord God with all your heart, mind and soul.  Love others as yourself.

Let us be silent, so we hear the whisper of God.

No one cares how much you know, until they know how much you care.

zelmo1

I have submitted a proposal to our state that would keep the limit at 2, but issue 1 Tom only tag and 1 legal turkey tag. Nobody, even kids need to shoot 2 jakes. I want the kids to be involved and learn the ethics we try to live by here. Also asked that anyone over 16, exempting first time hunters, be issued "Tom only" tags. I am interested in long term results, even though I won't be here to see them, lol. Z

kytrkyhntr

Quote from: WLT III on February 16, 2026, 09:03:36 AMBaiting, TSS, and youtube, has taken its toll on turkeys, more than any other factors. Anyone who cannot realize that, has no ability to reason.  My personal self imposed limit, is 4 longbeards, Spring and Fall combined. I eat everything on them, and 4 will carry me thru a year, Although I have turkeys on my own land, as well as neighbors, my satisfaction has always come from killing on public ground. No self respecting turkey hunter would kill his own turkeys, at least in the circle I run in :icon_thumright:


so now youre not a self respecting turkey hunter if you harvest turkeys out of the population on the ground you own lol

you guys always make solid points then go back and say the dumbest "look at me im a old school pro" comment ive ever heard. 


what is this your 3rd or 4th account on here?

can you write out the old swamper pro turkey man pelican lalongbeard rules of engangement?

I WANNA BE A PRO TOO GUYS PLEASE WRITE THE RULES OUT FOR ME.

pat yourself on the back a little harder please
don't let the truth get in the way of a good story