Wattsy said:
"...A LOT of people just cant be content with their own miserable little lives....They feel a need to worry about others instead. Rifle hunters worry about bowhunters. Bowhunters worry about crossbow hunters. Muzzleloader hunters worray about rifle hunters, etc, etc, etc..."
A refreshing voice of reason Wattsy...we have a handful of folks here on the MLF with some of that same mentality...I've dared to have a Flintlock built with a couple wrinkles different from what a few experts think I should be building...(ie: no patchbox)...so you can imagine.
On the matter of rifles for turkey...I agree if its legal people can do as they wish. I suspect whatever grief dished out was by those who feel its a greater challenge to call one in close enough to take them with birdshot headshots.
Same kind of heat I took when I used decoys to help bag a couple with my Flintlock smoothbore, calling them to my general area knowing they'd see my decoy set, and I shot each of them as they were concentrating on the jake decoy.
I was thrilled at bagging a couple of turkeys with a bare bore Flintlock, then some tried to rain on my parade by implying using decoys made it too easy, a non-accomplishment.
I suggested they remember that in the fall when they shoot deer standing knee deep in corn piles.
:grin:
Some of the resistance might have also been driven by a concern over having someone shooting a rifle at ground level when other camo hunters might be in the area...more and more states seem to be restricting turkey hunting to birdshot for that reason...ie: rifles are not legal here in NC.
FWIW, I personally think a rifle head shot is very high risk...and worse than a miss is the chance that a wounded bird might get away but die later. Toms twitch and jerk their heads around even more than a whitetail...and the kill zone is not all that big amount of skin and jelly around the head area...its the tiny walnut sized brain, half the size of a golf ball.
IMO, enjoy your rifle but at least consider an alternative shot placement...getting the ball into the vitals under the leading edge point of either wing, or right into the middle of the back.