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Depends on the private. I hunted 2 separate pieces of private last week with my son, about 2 miles apart. On one of them, the landowner lets anybody hunt and only has a few rules. Don't shoot in the yard, check in when you arrive and when you leave. The birds were there, but very skittish and call-shy. The other piece of private has lots of birds, but tons of rules, and only a few people have permission (i.e. family and close friends). The rules prevent you from setting up in natural travel routes, so you are trying to call birds away from where they want to be to stay within the landowners guidelines. Both present challenges similar to public land hunting, dealing with heavy pressure or calling from less-than-ideal setups to satisfy unusual requirements. We just ended up hunting public after a few tries on the private land. Less birds, but less rules. No birds killed.Public land, yes. Private, no.
Don’t even get me started on the amount of people you have to contend with now.
I think its region dependent for sure and directly related to pressure. Just like large game animals.Southeastern subspecies, specifically. But mainly because those seem to face the highest pressure.
I know the theory about gobbling being evolved out of turkeys based on harvest rates has floated around (and makes sense to me) but what is everyone else seeing?
I feel like 20 years ago, a turkey would be more vocal and more willing to come to a call. Now, it’s like 1 out of 10 at best. AND when they come in, it’s like a deer slipping in cover and sneaking around. Definitely get a suicidal one now and again, but I swear this is not the turkey I remember from the 90’s and early 2000’s.
Don’t even get me started on the amount of people you have to contend with now. Thanks THP and the pinhead guy that pets dead turkeys.
In your area, more of them dying early season than ever before. Thats why you aren't hearing them like you used to. That area is experiencing more hunting pressure than ever before, like a lot of areas throughout the U.S. The number of non-residents flocking that area is probably 2-3x what it was just a few years ago.I hunt north of Spokane.
Over the past five years the birds have definitely gotten a lot quieter. I've still had pretty good success, but they aren't nearly as vocal coming into a set.
It seems like anywhere you go the birds will be silent a week into the season. They're not dumb, they know we're out to get em.