First day turkey with a flintlock

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Nov 19, 2012
Messages
675
Reaction score
512
The last few fall turkey hunts for me have gone to the last day before I got a turkey. This year, I resolved to sit still in a spot that I knew would eventually get me a chance at a gobbler. About 10:00 this morning, the first day of fall turkey season in Illinois, three nice gobblers decided to walk right up to my spot. I aimed at the closest one, at about 15 yards. The 12 gauge flintlock went off fast and the bird was down and out. Young gobbler, 9” beard. May try smoking him.
773702CD-1514-491A-A4A4-6A55D86D488E.jpeg
 
Don’t like fall turkey hunting? After all; our pioneer ancestors hunted turkeys in the fall. More so, I would think than in the spring. I believe it’s a greater challenge to take a fall gobbler than a spring gobbler. The season is also much shorter.
Maybe you are jealous that we can hunt these magnificent birds here in the US? Lots more challenge than shooting driven pheasants.🤪
 
Last edited:
Well done!! You must have been sitting really still for them to get that close!! I am contemplating a Carolina trade gun to hunt turkey with as well as deer!!
 
Nicely done! I’ve killed a couple spring gobblers with the smokepole. It’s great fun. Congrats on the nice fall bird.
 
Every body to his own but not for me
Feltwad

Don’t like fall turkey hunting? After all; our pioneer ancestors hunted turkeys in the fall. More so, I would think than in the spring. I believe it’s a greater challenge to take a fall gobbler than a spring gobbler. The season is also much shorter.
Maybe you are jealous that we can hunt these magnificent birds here in the US? Lots more challenge than shooting driven pheasants.🤪

Though he has never tried it. Our pompous judge of all things sporting deems our turkey hunting methods unsportsmanlike and beneath a sporting gentleman.
This has come up with nearly every turkey hunting post on here. He's never tried it, has no idea what he's talking about, and yet,,,,, can't seem to keep from commenting negatively on it.

A true gentleman would have just said congratulations and let it be... or, said nothing at all.
 
Though he has never tried it. Our pompous judge of all things sporting deems our turkey hunting methods unsportsmanlike and beneath a sporting gentleman.
This has come up with nearly every turkey hunting post on here. He's never tried it, has no idea what he's talking about, and yet,,,,, can't seem to keep from commenting negatively on it.

A true gentleman would have just said congratulations and let it be... or, said nothing at all.
Every body to his own .
Feltwad
 
Though he has never tried it. Our pompous judge of all things sporting deems our turkey hunting methods unsportsmanlike and beneath a sporting gentleman.
This has come up with nearly every turkey hunting post on here. He's never tried it, has no idea what he's talking about, and yet,,,,, can't seem to keep from commenting negatively on it.

A true gentleman would have just said congratulations and let it be... or, said nothing at all.
I shot a turkey on the wing once does that count as sporting..... ;)
 
we have turkeys here in Arizona but they are on the north side of the grand canyon. I live on the Mexican border and it's at least a days drive to get there. You have to get drawn first too.
 
we have turkeys here in Arizona but they are on the north side of the grand canyon. I live on the Mexican border and it's at least a days drive to get there. You have to get drawn first too.
Oh my friend, this is not true, there are the Gould’s sub-species very near you at the Mexican border. Tags are near impossible to get, but I have seen turkeys all along the Mogollon Rim. Also, in New Mexico, an hour East of Safford is good turkey country. Turkey hunting talk gets me all butterflies in my stomach. There’s nothing else like it.
 
Back
Top