Bobcat misses out on turkey dinner
This was probably a young, inexperienced Bobcat.
Sharing the history of hunting Wild Turkeys with a Dog in the U.S. and Canada. Associated with the TurkeyDog.Org web site.
Wild turkeys have eight to 10 primaries on each wing (I count 8) and 18 to 19 secondary feathers per wing (count 18).
Think turkeys have a tough time in this cold weather, but there's Snow Buntings everywhere. They spend Summer in the Arctic, fly 2500 miles to Winter in WI. Tough birds.
If you have turkey dogs in Kentucky, Ohio, or West Virginia (or anywhere Black Vultures are, that allows Fall turkey hunting with a dog), you can help farmers deter vultures during calving season, in return for having more land to hunt turkeys on in the Fall. It's legal, guidelines here https://www.turkeydog.org/spring.html
Today is Levi’s 6th birthday. We would’ve much rather hunted turkeys today, but pheasants are fun too!
Never forgot sitting in a restaurant, having perch dinner in Menominee, Michigan in November 1975. The whole place went absolutely quiet when word got around - the Edmund Fitzgerald went down in Lake Superior. Turned out, with everybody onboard.
Gordon Lightfoot - "The Wreck Of The Edmund Fitzgerald"
Kaily, the dogs, and I made it out to our camp for opening day of Pennsylvania’s fall turkey season. We had a little bit of late start and finally started hunting about mid-morning. The first stop yielded some fresh sign and a small break. We sat for about an hour and a half and nothing happened.
We began working our way to the main road and I passed a gate that looked promising. We stopped and it didn’t take long for the dogs to break another flock about 400 yards from the vehicle. At this point, it was around 2:30 pm.
Around 4:00 pm, we heard birds trying to regroup. We had a juvenile at about 35 yards, but it didn’t present a shot. Things went silent and we rebroke the flock.
About an hour later, we had another juvenile come from the top of the ridge (where we were originally set up). It was a little under 40 yards when it picked out something it didn’t like and pitched down the ridge. Shortly after that, another bird begins keeing and walked up the ridge and Kaily made an excellent shot. At this point, it’s less than an hour until sunset.
I decided to stay a little longer to see if we could call in one more bird. Not much later, another bird came up from the bottom. It continued to walk back and forth below a small dip and it took awhile for me to get a clean shot opportunity. I was an to get shot at the same exact opening Kaily killed hers! I shot it about 5:55, roughly 15 minutes before sunset.
Both birds were young juveniles, 5 lb. 4 oz. and 4 lb. 10 oz. Kaily’s bird had really neat colored wings!
We’ll be done turkey hunting for a bit. I’m hoping to make it back to Wisconsin at some point.
We parked on the base of the far ridge in the distance. I hiked just under 6 miles, Lily ran 10 miles, and Levi ran 14 miles on that hike! No fresh sign unfortunately. We did find some really old dropping and feathers. Both dogs flushed some woodcock though.
The weather forecast wasn’t great for hunting that weekend. Saturday’s high temperature was supposed to be in the low 80’s and windy, with widespread rain showers developing later in the day lasting into Sunday. I figured we’d just go up and pick our vehicle up and not really hunt. We took the dogs and our gear anyway.
On the way up in NW Ohio, I decided to stop at a small piece of public land to run the dogs. I have never personally hunted this property, but I have seen multiple groups of turkeys on the surrounding private lands when I was in the area for work this past summer.
Well didn’t even bother take our hunting gear with us on our hike. It turns out, we do encounter a decent size of group of birds on the back end of the property.. roughly a half mile from the parking lot.
We hike back up to the vehicle and start getting ready. I realize that I took my vest out of the car when I shot my Ohio bird a few days prior and I took Kaily’s shotgun shells out of her bag when I was in West Virginia earlier that week.. we were out of ammo!
Seeing how Sunday was going to unfavorable weather wise and Ohio’s season was going to close in one week, I decided to take the gamble of leaving the break to find some turkey loads. Thankfully, there is a small hunting supply store about 14 miles away.
By the time we purchased our shells, drove back, and hiked back to the break site, it was about an hour and a half after the initial flush.
We set up under a very large black walnut tree.. which was a mistake since it was raining walnuts the entire time. I made about three series of yelps before I got a response to the south. Shortly after that bird began yelping, we had a juvenile Jake begin gobbling to the west. Both birds were coming in and they were going to get to our setup around the same time. Kaily did see the Jake first and he hung up at about 40 yards and began to head towards the south into a thicket. Shortly after, the hen came sprinting into our setup and Kaily was able to get a shot!
It was an unexpected hunt we won’t forget!
Lost my Walker Game Ears in some thick woods on 9/15/25 (6 weeks ago). Didn't think I'd ever see them again. Trying to get close to Red barking treed today and stumbled on them. Chewed on, but still work.
If this forecast is correct, there's two things we can do for turkeys. #1 harvest all the youngest birds of the year you can, they won't make it through a Winter like this. #2 stock up on corn to feed the remaining birds during the roughest times this Winter. The meteorologist said 12 to 24 more inches of snowfall than average is expected for parts of the Upper Midwest and the Great Lakes regions.
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