If you carry a capper in your shirt pocket under a jacket, no amount of " rattling" of the caps will be heard beyond a foot. If a turkey gets that close, just strangle it. :rotf:
I wear a men's size 11EEE boot, and I was able to walk within 10 feet of a man, sitting down with his back against a tree, next to the trail I was following, and he neither saw or heard me. The trail was covered in dried Oak and Maple, and Hickory leaves, and they sounded like breaking glass, and crumpling newspapers, all together, when you walk on them. Throw in the sound of snapping twigs.
I succeeded by using a " Fox Walk" technique, where the shoe or boot is places flat before it is allowed to push down on whatever is under it. You have to bend your knees, and keep your weight on your back foot while placing the front foot, to do this. YOU can still hear the sounds of the leaves, and sticks, crunching and breaking, because sound travels much faster through bone, than through the air. But people standing just 6 feet( and some closer) from you will not hear the sound, and animals, which admittedly have much better hearing, and also feel vibrations through their feet, also don't hear the sounds.
I am personally convinced that we worry too much about sounds, particularly when we hunt in inhabited rural " farm " lands, where the animals are well used to hearing " People noises". In Wild Country, however, such noises will alert the animals, because they are not used to having people around them, nor our smells, or our machines. Guys who spend big bucks to camoflage their guns, don't hesitate to drive a noisy truck, or 4-wheeler into a hunting area.
Go figure. :hmm: :thumbsup: