TURKEY HUNTING 2009Our annual spring turkey hunting season came in this year on Saturday April 11,
2009 for the Central region of North Carolina and the weather was
cooperating this year without being too cold or raining although it was
touch and go according to the forecast the weather prophets issued a couple
days earlier. Friday night
the rain came down pretty heavy and let up sometime in the early hours
around 2AM so the opening morning hunt was still on.
Web page updated by Bill aka Mickey Porter
n 04-13-09.
TURKEY HUNTING 04-15-09
I arrived at the hunt site
sometime after 0615. I had
my usual stuff like a portable aluminum stool with fabric netting which helps
tremendously when having to sit a while which is the norm for me turkey
hunting. I had an extra box call to in my hunting vest to do a little
experimenting with also. I heard a
long beard sound off. It was getting close to daylight by now especially with the
moon half full and we eased toward where we heard the gobble come from.
It sounded like he was close to the pasture fence line which was mostly
planted pines but a good portion was void of any planted trees at this location.
A fantastic place to set-up and "guesstimated" the distance to the fence
line at about 100 yards. See pix below:
After
quickly setting up the Jake and hen decoys, I took a position at the base of
a tower tree stand and had my back against one of the rear support utility
poles of which I didn't stick out like a sore thumb and by now the long beard was hammering away. I gave a soft tree
yelp but he did not immediately respond, however he continued to gobble. I
gave a series of soft yelps but again he did not instantly gobble. I
put the call up and let him continue to gobble at his own pace and could
tell he was seriously interested in those earlier yelps but I remained
silent on the call. Since he had a fix on
the yelps, I decided to let him do his thing. He was either coming our way
or not! After daybreak, I could make the outline of the long
beard in a large sweet gum tree and he was positioned about three fourths
the way up the tree which was a little ways back from the edge of the
pasture fence and could see him stretching his neck looking around.
It didn't take him too long before he pitched down into the edge of the pasture clearing
and went into a full strut. He did not gobble any more and
was strutting at a very fast pace walking directly toward the decoys which was about 20 yards to my
right. When the long beard advanced within about 30 yards of my
position, the
Remington 11-87 3 1/2 inch Super Magnum's Tru Glo sights were already fixed
on his head and neck area and the long beard rolled at the mighty thunderous
sound emitted from the
Super Mag. and flopped around trying to get to his feet but unable to do so. Normally, the Super Mag kicks
like a briar eating mule but I didn't feel a thing and had missile lock on the
long beard flopping around. I ran to Mr.
Long Beard and his head was pinned to the ground until the flopping
ceased. This was a classic text book example of Turkey Hunting How To
101 and it
doesn't happen like this too often, or at least in my case. Below is a self-portrait of
myself and the long beard. Naturally, I had to do a little promo for
my Porter Dual Hens box call and don't think a comb has been through my
hair in a few days as evidenced by this pix....grin if you must!
Pictured
with the long beard and yours truly is the Porter Dual Hen's box called used which has a one piece Honduras
Mahogany base and walnut lid with RB4 wood marquetry inlays. This
identical call is featured on my Sound Page which has a pix and sound file
of this call. The long beard had a 10.25 inch beard, 7/8 inch spur
lengths and weighed 20 pounds. He was harvested at 0645 hours at a
distance stepped off of 35 yards. I used Remington Hevi-Shot # 5 shot
1 3/4 oz. at 1300 fps velocity through the Remington 3 1/2 inch Super Magnum
11-87 general purpose shotgun with a Briley .675 diameter choke tube.
I plan to replace the choke tube in the very near future with a Black
Diamond Strike choke tube since I am not totally pleased with the shot
grouping at 40 yards with this set-up; hopefully the BDS choke tube will
perform much better. I would have switched over to the Hevi-13 shot
but had 67 rounds of the #5 Remington Hevi-Shot in stock and a little too
frugal at this time not to shoot them up.
Below pix showing where the long beard (far right in pix) fell and the
large sweet gum tree can
also be seen from this camera position where the turkey pitched down from.
I certainly do
appreciate it when a plan comes together like this morning. Below a few pixs taken filleting
the breast meat from the wild turkey harvested. I didn't take near enough
pixs but will try and do a little better next time.
The long beard ready
to give up the breast filets.
An incision is made
along the center of the breast bone only skin deep to pull the skin away
from the breast meat
exposing the breast.
This pixs shows the entire skin pulled back exposing all the breast meat.
Using a thin bladed knife, make a cut at the top of the breast bone
following the curvature of the skeleton and cut as close to the bone as you
can not to waste any meat.
This pix shows one
half of the breast removed from the breast bone and skeleton. Very
little if any breast meat is left to go to waste.
Pix of the turkey
breasts removed and ready to soak in salt water to remove as much blood as
possible. Each
breast filet had a single pellet in it and the salt water solution will help
remove any blood rendering beautimous breast filets ready to be vacuum
sealed and frozen until ready to cook. The antique Old Timer 4 inch
length blade folding hunter has field dressed many, many deer and works
equally well on Mr. Long Beard!
Wild Turkey breast
filets after salt water soaking and paper towel dried ready to be vacuum sealed.
Food Saver vacuum
sealing machine pulling the air from the bag and heat sealing!
Wild turkey breast
filets ready for the freezer. I will fix some wild turkey nuggets from
these beautimous breast filets in the future. View the hyperlink
to my wild
turkey
nuggets recipe.
A most enjoyable hunt and I was back
home by 0720.
Bill aka Mickey
Porter 04-15-09. More to follow!
INDIAN CREEK BLACK DIAMOND STRIKE CHOKE TUBE
Yesterday afternoon, I pattered my new Indian Creek Black Diamond Strike
choke tube that has a .665 restriction (inside diameter) and very pleased
with the performance at 40 yards shooting Hevi-Shot-13 # 6 1 3/4 oz.
shot. My
Remington 11-87 shoots about 3 inches POI (point of impact) to the right from
POA (point of
aim) even with the Tru-Glo rear sight adjusted about as far left in the
track as it will go without hanging out of the track; (note: I shoot left-handed), and it appears that I am
not alone in some Remington guns especially the 870 Empress shooting a little to the right from the point of
aim out at around 40 to 60 yards! My Briley choke tubes shoots to the
right of POA and peculiar to this gun/barrel combination. I fired two rounds and adjusted
after the first shot and there were enough pellets in the turkey target
head/neck area at 40 yards not to be overly concerned about the point of
impact
being a little to the right of point of aim. I will simply have to shoot a little
Kentucky windage at the longer yardages unless I put some optics
on the rig or opt for another shorter turkey barrel. There was also a
noticeable reduction in felt recoil using
the new choke tube just as Indian Creek advertises and I looked up their
patent number 5317825 and the patent describes in detail the construction
and claims which was very interesting as well. Below target fired at 40
yards and there are plenty of pellets in the darker area of the turkey neck
that did not show up with the scan taken. I certainly did not fire enough
rounds for any conclusive evidence but enough to get me more or less on
paper with that particular load and choke tube and confident that it will
perform well enough out to 40 plus yards to harvest turkeys.
As always, "Two of the Greatest Ships that ever Sailed, Friendship and
Fellowship."
Web page updated by
Bill aka Mickey Porter on 05-10-09 and 10-18-18.
LEAVING ON A
SPIRITUAL NOTE
If you do not know Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, please take
this moment to accept him by Faith into your Life, whereby Salvation
will be attained.
Ephesians 2:8 - 2:9 8 For by grace are ye saved through
faith; and that not of yourselves: [it is] the gift of God: 9 Not of
works, lest any man should boast.
Hebrews 11:1 “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for,
the evidence of things not seen.”
Romans 10:17 “So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by
the word of God.”
Open this
link about faith in the King James
Bible.
Romans 10:9 “That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the
Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him
from the dead, thou shalt be saved.”
Open this
link of Bible Verses About Salvation,
King James Version Bible (KJV).
Hebrews 4:12 “For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and
sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder
of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of
the thoughts and intents of the heart.”
Romans 6:23 “For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of
God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
Romans 3:23 “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory
of God;”
Micah 6:8 “He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what
doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and
to walk humbly with thy God?”