One and One

05/24/2005 -- The first morning I did everything right.  It was still good and dark when I hit the woods.  I spent a few moments waiting for the old owl to sound off.

This, if I was lucky, would make the turkeys gobble back in a kind of king-of-the-woods sort of shouting match.

Before long, as the sky brightened a little, an owl did indeed sound off.

Turkey gobbles filled the woods, as if waiting for that signal.  I heard at least 5 or 6 different toms in as many directions.  Wow, this was going to be great.

The nearest seemed to be across the river so I headed off for the next one.

Common wisdom is that it is tough to get a bird to cross the water.

So, I sneak down through the woods on a handy deer trail.  The tom gobbles on occasion as I progress, letting me know that I'm getting closer.

Eventually, I figure I better stop and so setting up my decoy, I find a comfortable(!) tree to put my back up against and start to do my best to imitate a love sick hen.

The tom does his best to convince me he's a love sick male and we spend quite a little time sweet talking each other.  Other toms in the woods are doing their best also to gobble their heads off in competition.  As the woods brighten, I can eventually see him carefully walking around on a large branch of an oak about 80 yards away.  Perfect I think, he'll hop to the ground eventually and come right in.

The sun comes over the horizon and I watch him give a last gobble or two and spread his wings.  He flies RIGHT PAST ME (slightly out of range of course) and keeps on going.

With his flight to the ground, he clams up and so do all the other toms and I never hear another gobble again.

Eventually, I give up and head out of the woods.  Better luck tomorrow I say to myself.

So tomorrow finds me back at the woods.  The owl hoots at the appointed time and starts the show.  This time the nearest bird seems to be on my side of the river so I basically plank myself down and get ready for action.  The decoy is mere feet from my tree, but I figure if I can see a bird, he's in range as I'm at the edge of a little bowl surrounded by thick gooseberries.

We (the tom and I) exchange gobbles and yelps for a while, then as the sun comes up he goes silent except for one gobble that sounded like he was finally on the ground and maybe coming my way.

What's happening I think to myself.  The longest three minutes in eternity go by, then I see something moving and his head and neck (showing a long beard) slip between two gooseberries.  This is it and I sight down the barrel and when he comes back into view let him have it. 

That was about as good as it gets I think to myself as I stand over the bird.

The fourth season was another matter.  I didn't get to hunt right away (when the weather was nice) and when I was ready to hunt, it rained every morning.  The first morning, the owl made his appointed hoots and...no return gobbles.  Maybe I should be hunting owls.  I had a recipe for owl once, well, really it was a recipe for bald eagle, but you could substitute owl if necessary (just kidding).  He did a few more hoots and far off I hear a gobble.  I hustle down to that end of the woods and as I'm traveling, don't hear any sounds. 

Finding a likely looking spot, I decide to just set up my decoy and see what happens.  So, I putter about, set up the decoy, get comfortable and produce a few calls from both my mouth call and the box call.  No responses. 

Ten or fifteen minutes later as the sun peeks over the horizon, I hear a slight commotion of a turkey taking wind right over my head and watch dumfounded as a tom revs his motor and blasts off from a branch right over my head.

That's pretty much it for the mornings' action.  The next day, I return to the woods and this time when I hear a tom gobble to the south, a few minutes later a "boom" announces that somebody else called him in.  so I call it a day (early) and head back home figuring it's a pretty good year when I shot one bird and had the pleasure of hunting another one or two.

Two more swans at Worth County Lake.  We now have another pair of swans at Worth County Lake in a pen adjacent to the first pair.  Our relative success seemed to play in our favor when a pair of birds needed a home and it really doesn't take any more work to feed and care for two pair than it does one pair.