Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

It’s turkey season

Spring turkey hunting season ends April 23

- swaters@sunsentine­l.com or Twitter @WatersOutd­oors

Helping a novice turkey hunter bag their first gobbler has its rewards.

For experience­d hunters, one of the best things about the spring turkey season is calling in a gobbler for someone who has never shot one before.

Talk to hunters who have done that and they will all say that they get more satisfacti­on getting another hunter his or her first bird than shooting one themselves.

With a little over a week remaining in the season in South Florida and the season ending in the rest of the state on April 23, there is still time to get in on the fun.

Calling in a turkey looks easy on TV hunting shows and YouTube, but there are so many little things that can spook Florida’s wary Osceola gobblers that new turkey hunters rarely have success hunting by themselves.

It takes an experience­d turkey hunter to know where to set up a blind, when and when not to move and, if a turkey comes in close enough, when to shoot.

One of my favorite stories was told to me by FWC commission­er Ron Bergeron of Weston, who was guiding someone who had never hunted turkeys. Bergeron had a gobbler heading toward their blind when the novice saw the bird, pointed at it and yelled, “There’s one!”

After the gobbler did an about-face and ran away, never to be seen again, Bergeron explained the importance of being quiet in the turkey woods, especially when a bird is approachin­g. Bergeron had better results early this season when he guided his daughter-in-law Sally’s nephew to his first bird. They had roosted the bird the evening before, so they set up on the edge of a pasture close to the pine trees where the gobbler had flown up for the night. When the bird first gobbled in the morning, he was only 75 yards away.

Imitating the yelps of a hen turkey on his mouth call, Bergeron got the gobbler’s attention and it flew down into the pasture, still about 75 yards away. Calling softly, Bergeron slowly got the gobbler to come closer while his guest remained quiet and still.

After 15 minutes, the bird was 20 yards in front of them, Bergeron said to shoot and the gobbler dropped where he stood.

“It rarely happens like that,” said Bergeron of calling in a bird off the roost, but when it does, it’s even more rewarding to share the experience with a new hunter.

A highlight of my season was being able to call in the first gobbler for Paul Schmitz of Coral Springs. Paul has taken me duck hunting for many years, but when I took him turkey hunting on public land, either other hunters spooked the bird we were working or a real hen called away the gobbler who was coming to us.

Hunting near Immokalee on private land with fellow duck hunter Bob Henry of Fort Lauderdale, we sat in a tent blind in a spot where turkeys like to travel.

The woods were quiet for a long time that morning, but after a few hours we saw a gobbler in a trail a few hundred yards away looking at my realistic Hunter’s Specialtie­s hen turkey decoy.

Instead of heading straight for “Henrietta,” the gobbler took another trail through the woods. Paul was the first to see him, 40 yards away and in full strut, which is when a gobbler puffs up and fans out his tail feathers in an effort to impress a female during the spring breeding season.

Even though it was in range and Paul had his shotgun ready to shoot, I whispered to Paul to wait for the bird to get closer and to come out of strut so the gobbler’s head and neck would be exposed.

It took a few minutes, but when the gobbler got within 28 yards he saw something he didn’t like, stopped strutting and turned like he was going to leave, and Paul didn’t hesitate.

After handshakes all around, we admired Paul’s bird, a 3-year-old with a 10-inch beard and sharp 1 3/8-inch spurs.

It was an impressive first gobbler, one that had all three of us equally thrilled.

 ?? STEVE WATERS/STAFF ?? Paul Schmitz, right, with his first wild turkey, which he shot hunting with Bob Henry on private land near Immokalee. The 3-year-old gobbler had a 10-inch beard.
STEVE WATERS/STAFF Paul Schmitz, right, with his first wild turkey, which he shot hunting with Bob Henry on private land near Immokalee. The 3-year-old gobbler had a 10-inch beard.
 ??  ?? Steve Waters
Steve Waters

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