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Quest
For The Double Grand Slam Bowhunt.
Bowhunt
For The: Florida Osceola | Merriam's
| Rio Grande | Eastern
|
|
Equipment
We Used | Doug Crabtree's Grand
Slam Hunt | Double
K Guide Service
 
Part 1:
Search For The Florida Osceola

March 2003 - The
2003 Grand Slam gets off to an action packed start at Florida
Wildlife Unlimited wild turkey camp near Zolfo Springs, Florida. Doug
Crabtree and I are both going for the Grand Slam ... this Spring ... with
our bows.
To The Osceola Hunt.
Part 2: The Merriam's
Wild turkey
 
April 2003 - The
South Dakota bowhunt with Dave Keiser at Double
K Guide Service was action packed. Brooks Johnson and Keith Beam of
Double
Bull Archery hunted with us. (Pictures and the hunt notes.) To
The Merriam's Bowhunt.
Part 3: The Eastern
Wild Turkey

This bowhunt was tops. Doug
Crabtree and Terry Speakman team called in wild turkey gobblers, one after
the other. Doug Crabtree called in a longbeard almost a mile away and and
completed his Grand Slam. Pictures and hunt logs. TO: Eastern
Bowhunt
Part 4: The Rio
Grande Wild Turkey

The Rio Grande hunts were
in 3 parts, sandwiched in between the Ohio and South Dakota bowhunts. Of
our Quest for the Grand Slam this hunt turned out to be the biggest challenge.
A lot of exciting hunts came down on this hunt. Doug's "Man on a mission"
hunt proves what you can do when the hunting clock is almost done ticking.
The last week of season the gobblers were scarce and call shy. My hunt
boiled down to one late seaon window of opportunity. TO: the
Rio Grande Bowhunt.
The
Grand Slam Clinchers
Ohio - Opening Day, A
Nice Day For A Grand Slam
Doug Crabtree
Gets His Grand Slam For 2003
We
drove to another area, on the top of a mountain, parked the truck and got
out. Doug had bagged a gobbler here a few years ago. He stood quietly,
listening, for at least 15 minutes. Then he said, "A gobble," and he pointed
into the dense woods. Terry Speakman and I hadn't heard anything, but I've
already learned not to doubt his incredible hearing. He started down a
nearby walking trail. In 200 yards he signaled Terry and they went to work,
each calling with a variety of calls. Then Terry and I returned to the
truck while Doug went another 300 yards. In short order Doug came a running.
"He's coming," he said.
We grabbed the two Double
Bull blinds and followed Doug for 500 yards. Doug cut and yelped. The Tom
gobbled. We set up quickly because the bird's gobbles got louder, he was
coming fast. Doug called again and the gobbler belted out a thunderous
gobble. Then we saw him, a longbeard. He went into the cautious mode and
stopped 25 yards away. I
took one pic.
Doug drew, aimed, and sent
his arrow to the mark. The gobbler ran down hill. Doug yanked up the edge
of the blind lit out. In a few minutes he came walking uphill carrying
the longbeard: Pic
1 and Pic
2. Doug had just completed his part of our Quest For The Grand
Slam, with the bow, in the Spring of 2003. Here
Doug
is with the Grand Slam Eastern longbeard. (How about that smile!)
And here is another pic of Doug
in the Setup he used. to complete his Grand Slam. Woooeeeee, what
a morning.
Ahh Yes, A Nice Day For A Grand Slam
I
set up my decoys on the dam and slipped into my Double Bull blind. This
time I was quiet. Daybreak came ... a gobble sounded 200 yards away. I
purred and made some a few soft clucks and waited. More gobbles followed.
When he flew down I clucked and yelped and shut up. His next gobble was
much further away.
I started to stress, the
season ends this week and I still don't have the Rio Grande for the Grand
Slam. I kinda stewed on that chain of thought for several minutes. Then
my bowhunting brain kicked into gear and I remembered some of my own advice,
TO
My Grand Slam Hunt
May 6, Morning: The
gobblers flew down and zipped up their mouths. The Duck had a hen go to
his decoys. Nothing came to the dam where I was. Afternoon:
No turkey sightings.
May 5: Today's morning
hunt was a good one, I have to finish the pictures and I'll put it up on
tomorrow's update. Four gobblers roosted across the river from me this
afternoon. I've got to get to sleep so I can get in their mix first thing
the morning.
May 4 Morning: I
paid one of the "tolls" of hunting on a cattle ranch, I got the
cows. The Duck zipped also. Afternoon: No gobbles in our end
of the world.

May 3 Afternoon:
A bearded hen
hung out in the area. A couple of far off gobbles was the whole boy
turkey show. A huge
wild hog crossed the open area across from the stock tank. I waited
until dark, listening for gobbles. None. When I got to camp the Duck had
butchered 2 of the 3 wild hogs he got this afternoon. He had called in
a gobbler earlier, but Don was in a treestand and the gobbler saw him and
spooked. So the Duck got his Double Bull blind from his 4-wheeler and when
the wild hogs came in he
shot this one. They didn't leave so he shot 2 more.
May 3 Morning: Overcast
and windy. Followed by a hard rain. Two very wet hunters came in early
this morning.
May 2 Afternoon:
I arrived just in time to change clothes and go to my blind on the dam.
It clouded up and intermittent thunder and lightning moved in. I called
in one longbeard, he came to the opposite side of the stock tank and went
to the field under the dam. The thunder storm got worse and he crossed
the river to roost. The Duck is here also and he went to the canyon. No
turkey action there. To the field notes and pictures from our Rio
Grande Hunt.
Search
For The Eastern
Ohio - Last Day, Two
Birds? Why Not!
At
daylight we were at one of Doug Crabtree's wild turkey haunts. He and Terry
Speakman began calling. Answering gobbles came from across the county road.
We drove a short ways down the road and stopped at a home. Doug talked
to the owner and he granted us permission to bowhunt his property. We set
up two Double Bull blinds on a hill and Doug and Terry moved several
hundred yards toward the birds and worked them back toward the blinds.
NEXT
To the Logs & Pictures
of the Ohio Bowhunt for Easterns.
April 28, Monday - Before
That ...
Doug
Crabtree and Terry Speakman located gobbles and figured a way to get to
the birds. We set up on a hillside in a field adjacent to a wood line.
Doug and Terry began calling and we heard gobbles right away. The gobbles
got closer fast and we saw them coming down the hill and approached our
decoys. The decoys were 10 yards from the blind and the two Toms were a
couple of steps further. I drew and aimed at the lead bird. (In picture
#5 you can actually see my arrow on it's way to the Tom on the
left.) My arrow hit on the money. The tom ran to the edge of the woods
and went down 25 yards from us. The other bird flew back uphill. Right
away, more gobbles came from downhill in the woods. Photos
of this hunt as it came down.
Terry Speakman hunts with
us and bags an Eastern
Five
Toms came to the edge of the woods and strutted and gobbled. Terry's blind
was set next to ours and he got ready to shoot. The birds entered the open
and walked up to the decoys. Two
gobbled right in the face of the hen decoy. Terry aimed at one and
shot. The arrow hit the vitals and the Tom ran a few yards into the woods
and dropped. The other Tom's ran to it and we heard them gobble and peck
the downed bird.
Once the Toms had gone Terry
and I picked up our wild turkeys, tagged them, and took pictures. We took
down the blinds and went looking for more wild turkey action. We found
it, too. Pics
taken as Terry Speakman's hunt happened.
Dennis
Crabtree has pre scouted a longbeard and he went to one of his travel routs
before dawn. His hunting partner Colby Johnson set up a couple hundred
yards away. Behind him, Dennis heard footsteps in the leaves. Suddenly
there was a very loud gobble, the Tom was right behind the tree Dennis
was leaning against. The longbeard walked past him and Dennis and shot
him at 18 yards. That's Dennis and his grandkids in the picture. Dennis,
here
is a larger picture for you.
The Rio Grande
(Still In Progress)

TO
Thumbnails of This Wild Turkey Tom Pics
Morning: I answered
a distant gobble and worked it closer. Then the Tom appeared in the field
below the dam (a strut zone) where I am bowhunting. Soon it came up the
side of the dam and I took it's picture as it checked out my hen decoy.
It's time to be shooting so I put my camera down and got my bow. When the
tom was 15 yards away I aimed and released. I heard a splash as my arrow
went into the stock tank. I missed! The bird looked around. I nocked a
2nd arrow. I aimed again, this time extra carefully. And missed again.
this time he left. At 10:00 I fished my arrow out of the tank and returned
home to shot my bow -- a quarter size group 8 inches high and 6 to the
left. I resighted and shot 100 arrows where they should go. The afternoon
hunt was gobblerless as was the Friday morning hunt at the dam, although
I did see several hens. Also I walked up on a couple dozen pouts, which
was very cool. So it was disappointing to miss, twice, but nothing short
of wonderous to see all those little turkeys.
April
23, Wednesday - Highlights
- Overcast and dark, I got up too early
and had to wait in my truck until it was light enough to see to get to
my blind without using a flashlight. But I dozed off and when I woke up
it was a getting daylight. Once in the blind (on the dam) I made a few
calls with a Knight & Hale Sweet Hen slate. A hen came up on the dam
within minutes and I clucked and purred to her. She looked at the decoys
and left, I heard a thunderous gobble and looked in the field below. Two
gobblers were coming, one's beard was dragging on the ground! Daylight
was not all the way in yet so I couldn't take pictures. Two gobblers walked
onto the dam and stopped. The monster, ground dragging Longbeard and a
Jake. They walked toward the hen decoy. The longbeard stopped a few steps
further than my 30 yard marker and strutted his brains out. However, the
jake went to both my hen and jake decoys, he strutted all around them and
started off the dam to my right. At last, the longbeard began to walk closer.
I waited. He was almost to my 20 yard marker (a stick) when he did me in
by walking down the dam on the water side. Rats!
Soon he joined the Jake
in the woods to my right. I switched to the mouth call and managed to call
them back! But it was the same scenario again, the jake was all over the
decoys and the longbeards strutted like the dickens some 35 yards away.
After they left a bearded
hen came up on the dam. This time I took pictures and have 7 very cool,
close pics for you of this bearded
hen and the decoys.
April 22, Tuesday - Highlights
-
I was in my blind by the hay bales 30 minutes before any daylight. Soon
I heard 3 different gobblers and several hens. After they flew down a longbeard
with a hen came through the field about 100 yards behind me. I called but
he wasn't interested. Three solo hens came by me. I worked a big longbeard
across the river and to the edge of the woods 40 yards away. He gobbled
mucho times. There is a small hill between him and the decoys and he couldn't
see them so he didn't come in. In the afternoon I hunted the Strut Zone.
I had 3 different gobblers working but the rancher's cows came up around
the blind and the gobblers moved on.
April 21, Monday - Morning
Highlights - (Back at Rick's)
I saw the top few inches
of the gobblers fan moving back and forth on the ridge 15 yards above my
blind. I stopped calling. He hung up. I called and he gobbled ... LOUD.
I cut fast and as loud. He appeared in some brush 25 yards away, in full
strut, near the top of the hill. As he gobbled I cut and yelped. It was
thunderous (and very cool). His neck turned fire red and he started down,
a big longbeard . At 15 yards I drew. My seat (thanks Wal-Mart) squeaked
... the gobbler ran up the hill. I saw his fan for some time but could
not coax him back down. I also called up two Jakes at the same time and
they charged and chased each other instead of going to my decoys. I returned
in the afternoon with no luck. After dark I pulled my blind and went to
the first hill from the ranch's grain field. I heard gobbles and hen talk
as I set by some hay bales for the morning.
April 20, Sunday Afternoon
- Highlights - I set my Double bull blind 50 yards from Rick's River
Stand. Knight & Hale had sent me 4 mouth calls and I tested each one.
Suddenly I heard footsteps in the leaves on the hill behind the blind.
Peeping through the netting on a viewing window I saw the head of a gobbler,
a two year old with a nice beard. It was staring at my other new thing,
an umbrella type Jake decoy. It didn't like it and retreated to the edge
of the ridge. I lowered a shooting window and saw the gobblers head, still
puzzling over the decoy. I considered shooting ... but didn't.
April 19-20 - Doug
& I hunted at my place Friday and Saturday. The wind was blasting and
we didn't get into any turkey action.
April 18 - A Man On A
Mission
"I've
got a good feeling about tomorrow morning, let's leave asap," said Doug
Crabtree. We took pictures of everyone, ate a late lunch and took off.
Doug insisted on driving straight through. We pulled up in my yard at 7:38.
Doug yelped and a gobbler answered way to the East. He grabbed his bow,
blind and decoys and drove East. I went to sleep. We had seen a hen several
times by the dirt road above the grain fields and Doug called and got the
gobbler coming there, but a county maintenance truck drove up to work on
the nearby lines. They said it would take two hours. Doug checked the river
and the windmill areas. No luck. He returned to the hen's haunt. A gobbler
responded and came in on the run, with his long beard swinging. He blew
up and stopped when he saw the decoys. Doug shot. The Longbeard flew up,
but hit a tree limb and careened toward the field. Normally Doug would
wait, but not this time, he didn't want the gobbler to get in the grain
field, it would be very hard to find. Doug heard loud Putts and ran downhill.
He saw the Longbeard, 30 yards away, almost to the field -- with a gray
fox in hot pursuit behind it. Doug cut into the field. The fox veered off
the trail. The gobbler was slowing and Doug dove headlong for him. His
thumb hit the ground first and popped painfully out of joint, but his fingers
found the bird's neck. They skidded to a stop. The gobbler had a 10 1/2"
beard and weighed 22 pounds. That night we had a well deserved celebration
at the Backdoor Bar & Grill. Here
is Doug Crabtree and his Rio longbeard.
Part 3:
The Merriam's Wild Turkey
Going For #3,
The Merriam's Wild Turkey
Day
2, Afternoon Continued:
After missing the Tom I
felt a little rough. I didn't know it yet but I was only a few minutes
shy of spending one of the best hours of my entire bowhunting life.
Wild turkeys began coming
from all directions and I totally enjoyed watching and taking pictures
of these beautiful Merriam's wild turkeys. The following link to the hunt
includes a link to the photo gallery of the highlights of the activity.
TO
THE HUNT.
Day
2, Afternoon:
Keith Beam (of Double
Bull Archery) and I set up on the edge of the field near the strip
of woods and large trees where Doug and I roosted the turkeys yesterday.
Keith used a separate Double Bull blind to video. In no time we began seeing
Merriam's. Keith was using a slate call and doing a fine job and the birds
made their move toward the source of the calls. To
The First Toms
Day
#2: Run & Gun (Without the gun)
Dave Keiser picked Doug
Crabtree and I up. He said we were going to "Run and gun." First we went
to the "Goose Pit" area and Dave drove the ridges above the canyons. Soon
we glassed several gobblers in a creek bottom and Dave zipped ahead of
the turkeys and we set in a cut corn field on the edge of the woods. Doug
began calling. A gobbler responded at once and soon a Merriam's longbeard
walked out of the woods in full strut. He advanced to about 35 yards and
then he saw our decoys. TO
THE HUNT
Day #2: Morning Hunt -
Dave
Keiser took Doug and me to AJ's. We set up on a high spot in a field adjacent
to a canyon. At first light we heard lots of gobbling and hen talk in the
canyon. When the birds flew down they walked 1,000 yards to the North of
us and we watched 100 or so birds on the far hill for two hours. Dave picked
us up and we went to another area .
Two Toms and Brooks Johnson
& Keith Beam of Double Bull Archery
Keith
Beam and Brooks Johnson hunted at Egg Roll Canyon. They heard a gobble
and glassing the area. Six Toms were in the canyon. The hunters circled
ahead of the Toms and set their Double Bull blind up in an opening on a
high spot in the woods. They called and the Toms answered. Six jakes came
out of the woods and approached their hen and jake decoys. Brooks drew
his recurve but the birds ran to the decoys and passed through his shooting
window. Brooks dropped a 2nd window and made a 9 yard shot. The turkey
ran a few yards and gave out. The other birds ran to it and began pecking
it. Keith and Brooks switched places and Keith aimed carefully for a head
shot ... and made it. These two have harvested scores of wild turkeys but
this is their first "double" on wild turkeys. Here
is their picture.
April 14: Day #1

Two gobblers and Dave
Keiser & Brooks Johnson
Dave Keiser took Keith Beam
and Brooks Johnson of Double
Bull Archery and me to a field overlooking a canyon and we set up two
blinds. (Brooks was shooting, Keith videoed and tagged along to take
pictures) Here's
Brooks'
blind. Before daybreak we heard several gobblers. They flew down and
soon we saw a gobbler
with a hen on a distant hillside. A couiple of Toms came up to them
and the gobbler chased them away. Keith called at the
two Toms and they stopped. And then headed
our way. One bird moved out front and I
got a good pic. And a closer
pic of the Tom. A group of hens came out of the canyon, clucking away.
The Toms stopped just short of bow range and went after the hens. Here's
Keith
Beam in the blind talkin' turkey. You can see a long way up here in
South Dakota and we enjoyed seeing 9 other groups of turkeys on the hillsides
around us. Then we got in Dave's truck and we drove and glassed for gobblers.
We set up twice without any results. The 3rd time was better. We walked
down into a deep canyon and set up in a small opening. Here are Dave
Keiser and Brooks Johnson placing their decoys. Here
is the terrain and the blind. Then we all scattered for 100 yards and
hen called to make it sound like a bunch of turkeys.
It worked.
A longbeard strolled up
behind the blind Keith and I were in and gobbled several times. (Too close
to risk a picture.) The bird drummed and spit and then left. It didn't
seen Brook's decoys because our blind was in the way. Two other Toms came
but the same scenario played again.
After that we returned to
camp for lunch.
Doug Crabtree was there,
he had gone to the capital to get our hunting licenses. We went to a farm
and set up near the biggest collection of turkey tracks you can imagine.
At roosting time we glassed dozens of gobblers flying up in some cotton
wood trees. We will be back there tomorrow.
Apr
13: Arrival Day: We began seeing Merriam's 70 miles from South
Dakota. As you see here these two jakes were good enough to let Doug (Crabtree)
sneak up on them with the camera. (Bigger
Pic) We saw lots more. Sunday evening we arrived at Dave Keiser's Double
K Guide Service. Dave guides bowhunters exclusively. The terrain
is a combination of rolling prairie and wooded canyons and Doug assures
me there are "oodles and oodles of turkeys." We are meeting Brooks Robinson
and Keith Beam of
Double
Bull Archery. (We have to buy our licenses in the morning and then
the hunt begins.)
We stayed in Wichita, KS
last night and this morning we stopped at Dick's Custom Archery where
I bought some red wraps and 5" red feathers & Snyper replacable blades.
The arrow I missed the Rio gobbler with has barbed feathers and I could
not see it clearly when I shot. The red will help.
Part
2: The Rio Grande (Still In Progress)
Apr
11, Day #7: A Double Header
Morning: Two gobblers
sounded nearby off on the way to my blind on the dam. I ran up on the dam
and quickly set my hen decoy about 35 yards from the blind. No gobblers
showed. At 7:44 a faint gobble across the river. I cut excitedly, real
loud. The gobbler broke in on me. A few minutes later I called again and
the gobbler answered, this time he was much closer. Seconds later I saw
him cross the field. It looked like he would come up to the top of the
dam on the trail 10 yards from me. Woops, he stopped and walked out of
sight along the bottom of the dam. I waited a little bit and then turned
away from him and called again. In seconds he came into view 80 yards away
on top of the dam -- a big longbeard. (I did not expect a tom to approach
the decoy from that direction and it was too far for a comfortable shot.)
He went into full strut and walked back and forth before moving toward
the decoy and I got
these
5 pictures. I traded my camera for my bow. The longbeard drummed
and spit around the decoy. I waited to see if he would come closer. He
passed the decoy, which was good, but turned and started walking away.
I aimed and shot. And missed. The gobbler took a short hop down the side
of the dam and casually walked away. Doug had no luck this morning.
Afternoon: I saw
3 hens. Doug heard a far away gobble and called. Some hens came into the
area and then Doug saw a gobbler standing 25 yards away by the brush behind
him. The gobbler appeared the blind's shooting window but he was moving
further away. Doug aimed and shot. And missed. Two for two.
Apr
10,
Day #6: Gobblers & Cows!: Rick
Philippi walked up on a wild boar (in the dark) going to his stand on the
river. He called in a jake but it didn't come close enough for a bow shot.
I hunted the dam again and saw 2 hens and called in a gobbler that hung
up at 100 yards. Doug set his blind 60 yards from the gobbler he roosted
yesterday. He could see it and a hen in the same tree, plus another longbeard
in a nearby tree. At good light the gobbler flew down -- it went 400 yards
into the adjacent coastal field!!! The 2nd tom flew down across the river.
When the hen flew down it walked by Doug. Once the hen was gone Doug set
35 yards up inside the woods edge and called to the gobbler in the field.
It came running. So did the hen. And the chase was on. They came by Doug
3 times but never quite close enough.
Afternoon:
Steps ... behind my blind at the dam. I looked downhill in time to see
a wild boar enter the field below and trot off toward Rick's River stand.
(Rick, here is a pic
of your wild boar.) Today I set my decoy
50 yards from the blind, since the gobblers are not coming right up
to the decoys yet. At 5:25 I heard a distant gobble and clucked a response.
More gobbles followed as the tom came closer -- from the stock pond side
of the dam (Pic
of how this area looks). I saw the gobbler top the hill and glassed
him, a monster longbeard. It blew up huge and zipped through the trees
across the water. Moments before about 50 cows had walked into the area
between us. The gobbler burst out of the cedars and slammed on the brakes
... and retreated a little. As I took the big
gobblers picture cows started walking into the frame. Cows started
onto the dam. The gobbler walked away. When he was well out of sight I
hopped out of the blind and chased the cows to Mars. Doug hunted the strut
zone again without any luck.
Apr
9, Day #5: Doug
set up 70 yards from the gobbler he roosted last afternoon. The longbeard
flew down after daylight and walked through tall grass and stopped 25 yards
from the blind but did not come to the decoys. Doug wisely did not risk
a shot through the grass. Meanwhile, I, ahhh, well, I fell asleep in my
blind. Afterward, I moved my Double Bull blind to a wooded corner on the
dam.
Afternoon: I saw
one hen from my blind on the dam. Rick Philippi came down and he and Doug
hunted the Strut zone (in different blinds). No turkey action but they
both roosted gobblers for the morning hunt.
Apr
8, Day #4: We
were set up 45 minutes before daylight, I was at Rick's River Stand and
Doug was 50 yards from the gobbler he roosted yesterday. The gobbler flew
down before good light and went to Doug's decoys. It was still too dark
and Doug could not see his pins to shoot. On the afternoon hunt we hunted
near Rick's River and I got great pics of a bearded hen (pics coming) and
a wild boar came into the area but smelled us.
Apr
7, Day #3: The
morning hunt was uneventful. The new afternoon blind worked better, Doug
called in 2 jakes and a longbeard but we couldn't turn it into a shot.
He left the blind before dark and roosted a gobbler.
Afternoon: The first
turkey at Strut
Zone #2 was a bearded hen. It hung out for 2 hours and I took pictures
(look for them tomorrow). We heard gobbles and Doug talked the tom closer.
When I saw the gobbler sunlight had it illuminated and a fat, long beard
swung as the gobbler walked. He approached on the side where brush hides
the blind, and also prevents a shot. We couldn't see him because of the
brush, but we heard him drum and spit and gobble, just a few yards from
us. Doug waited, bow in hand, for this big longbeard to move toward the
decoys. It didn't. It walked away. Later I sat down in the tall grass where
the Longbeard had been. No wonder it didn't go to the decoys, the grass
around us was too high and it could not see them. We quickly relocated
the blind 50 yards to an area without the tall grass, this gobbler
will see the decoys ... next time.
Apr 6, Day #2, Morning
Hunt: My "First
place they go" blind was not the first place they went this morning.
There were distant gobbles but no action. However, there were shots and
talking nearby, on the other side of the river. The Duck hunted Strut Zone
#1 and saw one hen and 3 deer.
Opening
Day April 5: Afternoon Hunt: Doug and I set up below the dam overlooking
a field that runs along the river. He called in 7 gobblers & 3 hens.
We both passed up shots on a jake and a 2 year old tom. 10
Thumbnailed Pictures.
Morning Hunt - Doug
Crabtree's 11:05pm Friday flight arrived late and and it was almost daylight
when we arrived back at my place. At sunrise a big gobbler sounded off
and we heard other gobblers, as well. We didn't call, we were only checking
the area out this morning.
Meanwhile,
Donald Duck
was at the blind at Strut
Zone # 1. At daylight the air was full of gobbles from the direction
of the river. An hour later he heard gobbles near the Point, so he used
his slate call, yelped, and shut up ... and waited. A loud gobble startled
him, it was very close to him; but behind the blind where he couldn't see
it. Two adult gobblers came into view and walked to the decoys. As Don
drew the lead tom continued walking and passed through the blind's shooting
window. Here's
What Happened & 3 Pics...
Scouting For The
Rios:
Mar 31, Getting Ready:
I set up 3 Double Bull blinds, two in last years very active Strut Zone
area and one on a hill overlooking the tall trees that line the river.
Mar 30, Monster Longbeard:
I looked and listened for wild turkey gobblers. I glassed a monster longbeard
Rio strutting and gobbling on the dam by the stock tank. Plus 3 different
Tom's were working the field next to where I hunted last Fall.
March
12 (Afternoon): Two
Gobblers show off for a group of hens.
When I first saw these wild
turkeys they were in a wheat field. They were 400 yards away. I stopped
my truck and used the woods on the edge of the field for concealment to
work my way down to them. They co-operated very nicely, the flock of hens
moved over to my side of the field. Two adult gobblers stayed out in the
field and put on a show for the hens. They strutted a bunch but they never
gobbled. I got pretty close to the hens at one point (the last picture).
Daylight began to fade and I stopped following the birds. By the time I
got back to my truck it was dark. Here
are the 7 best pictures.
Part 1:
In Search Of The Florida Osceola
Doug Crabtree and I bowhunted
one of the Florida
Wildlife Unlimited wild turkey hunting camps near Zolfo Springs,
Florida.
The Equipment
We Used
BODOODLE
& Timberline Archery Products - Accurate shooting, arrow after
arrow, depends on the bow's arrow rest and bowsight.
Alpine
& Barrie Archery - A close look at how Alpine Archery's Fatal
Impact and SS Stealth Force and the Barrie Archery Snyper performed during
set up and on this hunt.
Osceola - Day
6: The Final Day
Morning Hunt:
This morning Doug Crabtree guided songwriter Mike Mc Bride. Doug is still
hot and called in yet another gobbler, a longbeard. Mike bagged the longbeard
Tom (10 1/2" beard) with his shotgun at 30 yards.
Afternoon Hunt: Day
6 (Afternoon Hunt): Back At North Bear Hammock

We set the Double Bull blind
up against the fence at the same place we were on Day
4. An hour passed before we saw the first wild turkey, far away, on
the opposite side of the adjacent field. I glassed it and identified it
as a hen . Doug called it in (To
The Pictures & what happened.)
Osceola - Day
5: Wild Hogs In Florida, Close Up ...

Following a rain storm we
drove out to hunt and saw wild hogs in an orange grove. Doug (cell) phoned
Florida Wildlife Unlimited's camp to see if we could hunt here, but
we couldn't. Hogs in a Florida orange grove! That is
a new one to me and I wanted pictures. So I snuck up on 'em. (In the first
pic, as the hogs come into view, you'll see some plastic piping being used.)
I wanted to see if I could get in close enough for a shot. As you see,
I did. To
Wild Hogs In The Orange Grove.
Osceola - Day
#4: Calling The Wild Turkeys In Close

We parked the
truck and walked through the woods to a field at North Bear Hammock. There
were already birds in the field. We set up on the woods side, right against
the barbed wire fence. Doug reached through the Double Bull blind's windows
and set two decoys up arms length away. Meanwhile a strutting gobbler chased
after a jake and two hens. (See Pictures.) Then Doug called with clucks.
A hen started for us right away and the gobbler followed. (Row 2 of Pictures).
One hen was very vocal and Doug made calls that "fussed" with her. The
hen came right to the decoys (Last Picture) two arms lengths away from
the blind. TO PICS
& WHAT HAPPENED
Osceola - Day
#3: March 19
Doug guided a hunter for
Florida Wildlife Unlimited this morning. He called in a longbeard but the
fellow's gun jammed and the Tom got away.
This afternoon Doug
and I hunted wild hogs. We saw several distant groups. Finally we spotted
some across a 100 yard wide field, just inside the woods. Doug stealthily
crossed 75% of the field but had to stop and sit down when 2 hogs entered
the field. They rooted around and then proceeded in my direction. I was
ready but they turned and walked 50 yards from Doug. At the same time another
hog come out of the woods and walked toward Doug. The other 2 hogs picked
up Doug's scent. One ran, the other grunted loudly and ran toward Doug,
who was ready for a shot at the 3rd hog. When he heard the loud grunts
Doug looked and saw the hog coming. He swung his already drawn bow around
to shoot. The hog veered off and raced for the woods, as did the 3rd pig.
Osceola - Day
#2 March 18 - One Minute and 16 Seconds !!!

Day #2: March 18
- Gobble! It was barely audible. Another faint gobble and we moved out
as daylight came on slowly. We walked a mile. The gobble was louder now
and we heard other birds as well. Doug stopped at a trail crossing under
the fence. We slipped under the barbed wire and waded a shallow stream.
"Right Here," Doug whispered, TO
THE HUNT
Osceola - Day
#1 March 17

Day #1: March 17
- Florida is very unique looking, especially compared to the rest of the
USA this time of the year. It's very green here and palmettos and big trees
full of spanish moss are everywhere. We slipped through the woods and set
up our Double Bull ground blind at the edge of a large field. To
The pictures and what happened.
Morning Hunt:
The 3 day drive here to Central Florida whipped me and I slept in. Doug
Crabtree scouted BJ's stand. He called and a hen entered the nearby field.
Doug called again and a gobbler answered. Another gobbler joined in and
they started coming closer. Doug pulled out before the birds got there,
we're going back tonight. The same scenario happened again at two different
places. Things are looking good.
Osceola - Arrival
Day March 16
Sunday: At
10::00 pm we pulled into the Florida
Wildlife Unlimited turkey camp in central Florida. Bobby Smith greeted
us and took us to our quarters for this week's hunt. Doug Crabtree
and I are here to bowhunt for the Osceola wild turkey. It's the hardest
turkey to get, but the way I see it, we're the men for the job. Tomorrow
morning we are going to BJ's stand. After tomorrow morning's hunt I will
update right here. Wish us luck.
February 9, 2003:
The Grand Slam Is On For 2003 ...
My
cell phone's ID read "Doug Crabtree." I pushed the Talk button, Doug sounded
excited, with good reason too. Our plans for a Grand Slam bowhunt in the
Spring of 2003 were falling in place. The hunt is going to happen.
-
The
Osceola: On Monday, March 17 we go for the Osceola with Florida
Wildlife Unlimited in central Florida.
-
Rio
Grande: April 5 is the opening day for the Texas season. Doug
will be my guest.
-
The
Merriam's: On April 14 we hunt Merriam's in South Dakota with
Dave
Keiser at Double
K Guide Service.
-
Eastern:
The Ohio season starts on April 27 and we hunt at one of Doug Crabtree's
turkey haunts.
Sponsors For The
2003 Grand Slam
Our double Grand Slam with
the bow created excitement with several manufacturers and they stepped
up to the plate to sponsor the event. The sponsors are: Alpine
Archery (bows), Barrie
Archery (Rocky Mountain broadheads), Double
Bull (blinds), Knight & Hale
Game Calls, Pro Release (release
aids), EASTON Archery (arrows),
Spott
Hogg (bowsights), Fine-Line
Archery (peep sights & bowquivers), Bododle
(arrow rests), Timberline
Archery (bowsights), Knight &
Hale (turkey calls), Florida
Wildlife Unlimited (Florida Osceolas), Dave Keiser's Double
K Guide Service (Merriam's), and Freddie
Bear Sports. |