lastcast33
FNG
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2021
- Messages
- 18
I think this guy was simply trolling and caught a few marlins along the way. People who truly care about turkeys don’t purposely take a shot at 70 yards.
What’s the furthest rifle shot for you to consider that folks truly care about deer and elk?People who truly care about turkeys don’t purposely take a shot at 70 yards.
Depends on the shooter, equipment, wind, temps etc.. How often do you shoot and at what ranges? Guys in PA shoot year round at 1000 yds. Their range is different than most and definitely mine.What’s the furthest rifle shot for you to consider that folks truly care about deer and elk?
I've not checked in a while but loading components have been hard to find. I suppose it depends which hills and which powder your recipe calls for but it seems that guys were having a heck of a time finding hulls. Shot was available, but hulls and powder not so much.Didn't start out trolling, but it did provide some entertainment !!! I was not aware that I was pissing in someone's morning cereal by using a shotgun setup to its full potential.... (seriously, wtf?) If I'm talking to an archery only hunter, I get it, total street cred there. Past that .... (is there a jack-off motion emoji?)
Definitely different in the mountain states! Turkey are just a fun little hunt to hang with my old man and to kill something in the Spring before bear season starts. Also a good time to test out new clothing layers, rather than during a week long backcountry hunt. Tough to put a bird on a pedestal, when I spend the Fall chasing trophy mulies, and calling in bugling bull elk! They are thriving all over WY and popping up in all sorts of new places (I heard some up at 9k ft while bear hunting). Mostly a nuisance on ranches around my parts. They are a pain in the ass if you have a haystack! We have a fall season, which is mostly just picking them off on private with rifles. I prefer to chase them in challenging terrain, with no idea where they are or where they are headed, so I travel to it. Much more fun to chase down gobbles and work angles and ambushes! Though, I will probably nail one this fall off someone's haystack with a rifle, just to have some bird to throw in the smoker!
Got some good info, I appreciateit. Gonna bite the bullet (hopefully not literally... since that sounds painful) and set myself up with some itty-bitty Tungsten shot! My current setup is choked tighter than a nuns p***, so I'm already used to dead on aiming at close range (I use a red dot). Best of luck in the Spring gents!
Good on powder. My .300blk and .460 Rowland pistol experiments involved a lot of shotshell powders. Hulls may be an issue, if I can't find the right recipe. (Might have to trade some primo rifle/pistol materials, once I locate local shotshell reloaders). I'd be better off if I went with 3", since there are more tungsten recipes for them. But I'm too stubborn to backpedal to smaller shells... for now.I've not checked in a while but loading components have been hard to find. I suppose it depends which hills and which powder your recipe calls for but it seems that guys were having a heck of a time finding hulls. Shot was available, but hulls and powder not so much.
That Garrett wand does work. I bought one a few months ago after my 2nd close call with a dentist. Luckily both times my tooth quit hurting in a couple days. But i could see where it slightly chipped this last time.Broke a tooth on TSS in turkey sausage this fall. I have not found a comprehensive positive review on a metal detector like that that will pick up a TSS because the pellets are so tiny. There is one (below) that is supposed to work pretty for steel, but supposedly hardly picks up TSS even with a pellet in hand.
I live in Nebraska and have hunted turkeys for years, and in my experience the turkey numbers are great. All of my fellow hunting buddies agree. There are birds everywhere.Nebraska has been 3 birds since at least around 2008. I don't think Nebraska has the same numbers they once did.
I live in Nebraska and have hunted turkeys for years, and in my experience the turkey numbers are great. All of my fellow hunting buddies agree. There are birds everywhere.
TSS is the only viable non-tox option until (potentially) warchief #5 came out. Some people don’t give a hoot for shooting at long range, they just don’t want to use lead. I went with a 410 using #10 TSS because I wanted my range limited to 50 so long shots are off the table and so my pattern density was maximized within that range while using a sub gauge.You’re looking at this through the wrong lens. The numbers are so bad why would we not get the low lying fruit and make a quick fix by limiting our range? Especially if it keeps guys like the OP who “doesn’t care about turkeys” out of the woods?
Poult production clearly is an issue - I agree. But there’s compounding theories about pecking order and dominance and how killing a dominant bird before hens are bred can completely jack up the breeding cycle in a given area. So if limiting TSS and maybe letting a few of these dominate birds ( who usually are damn near impossible to kill WITHOUT long range capabilities) go?
I just can’t sit around and say welp there’s nothing we can do…. Gotta be willing to put in the work and sacrifice to help them. Me personally am looking to get trappers into our farm to get coons and possums. Going to adjust our control burn patterns to happen after peak nesting. Obviously limiting TSS isn’t my only idea…
This in spades. Not saying you can`t kill a turkey at 70 yards ( I guess ?? ), but I`ll never believe some won`t be crippled at those ranges regardless of load. Amen big time to the last statement. If I can`t get him to 40 yards, preferably closer, he`ll be with the hens next morning. Just my opinion, mind.It's not what you asked but you surely had to expect it. You'll catch quite a bit of negative feedback when asking for 70 yards loads on hardcore turkey forums. TSS will do it with the right setup but damn that's a long way. Getting them to come in that additional 30 to 50 yards is some of the best part of turkey hunting.