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Beautiful bird! I shot one like that in Montana years ago. To this day it’s my most mature Merriam’s with sharp 1 1/8” spurs, but was small. I didn’t weigh him but have always said I’d be amazed if he was 16 pounds.Got mine in the mountains of CO at around 10k. Called in with a wild country pot call, no decoys. Came in strutting and shot with a 20g. Odd bird, 8 1/2 beard, full fan and dominate, but only weighed 13lbs.
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I have always just assumed lack of age was why long spurs are so rare around here but I saw something this season that makes me wonder if I’ve been underestimating age.I have killed one like that too. Tripped me out. That photo I shared was a private property bird that was at least 5 years old, my wife shot him when she was pregnant. We just have a lot of predators and hiding spots for them. It doesn’t help the gobblers when they play “marco, polo” in the jungle.
I have never seen or heard anything like that. That would be interesting behavior for sure.I have always just assumed lack of age was why long spurs are so rare around here but I saw something this season that makes me wonder if I’ve been underestimating age.
I was scouting and found a nice long beard and two hens on a ridge. The gobbler was standing on a little finger ridge that dropped off steeply into a small clearing and his two hens were already down in that clearing. He started down a well used elk trail to get to his ladies. I don’t know what I was expecting but he almost crouched as he moved down hill so his legs were almost parallel to the ground and he was undoubtedly digging his spurs into soil. Maybe some of these big gobblers are older than I’ve been thinking and are just wearing their spurs down…

That’s very interesting and makes sense. Thanks for sharing this info!Spur length is all genetic and has nothing to with age. I listened to a podcast about a banded bird that was banded at least 2 years old (full fan and beard over 7”). He was killed 4 years later and the difference in his spur length was +1/8” from when he was banded. This was in the south, so no chance he was beating them up in rocky terrain.
This new found interest in aging turkeys is some weird carry over from deer hunters. The criteria for shooting a turkey is pretty simple for most die hard hunters, he’s got a full fan or he doesn’t. If you can hang him on a limb or he’s especially heavy, that’s just a cherry on top.
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Congrats on your first and welcome to the obsession!My first turkey. Took me a couple days to get them figured out. Set out a hen and Jake decoys. Used a slate call just enough to get one looking at the decoys then I shut up. 20 gauge at 28 yards. Im hooked now but luckily my wife loved eating him. Shes ready for next season!