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Hen turkey sounds
Hen turkey sounds






hen turkey sounds
  1. #Hen turkey sounds professional
  2. #Hen turkey sounds series

Get you a few cheaper mouth calls and a pair of scissors and cut them and bend them until they fit and give you the sound you are going for. A good seal is crucial to creating accurate turkey sounds. That tape can be trimmed and shaped to fit your mouth the best. Check out our mouth calls and try one out.Įach mouth call has a piece of tape that creates a seal with the roof of your mouth. Meeting in the middle with a double reed call is always a good choice, it will take you from the beginning stages all the to being able to make all the turkey sounds you need to make. A single reed call is going to be easier to blow, where a triple reed call is going to give you more range and rasp.

hen turkey sounds

In my opinion, the number of reeds is strictly up to the caller. But if you still have a bit of reflex, try sliding that call forward a bit and see how it goes! We suggest starting with a basic call or a multi-pack to find a call that fits you best from the start. The more time you spend with the mouth calls in your mouth, the quicker you will get used to having a call that far bback on your tongue. This is something that you will naturally overcome with time. Using a mouth call can be tricky, when you are first starting out your biggest dilema will be overcoming your gag reflex. Take a step back and get back to the basics - great calling comes from great fundamentals.

#Hen turkey sounds professional

Start by trying not to mimic the professional or competition callers you see and hear on youtube or TV. Using a mouth call can be difficult to start, but once you are past the gag reflex it can and most likely will become the most versatile tool you have in your Turkey Vest. Mouth calls are a great way to cover a large vocal range and still be cost effective. Being able to yelp, cut, purr, and create other turkey sounds with one call helps you remain stealthy and convincing to that ole long beard. Thankfully, Primos offers a wide variety of shapes, sounds, and number of reeds to suit a beginner or a seasoned professional. Jakes often kee-kee run in the fall.Turkey mouth calls are some of the most versatile calls that are made. The kee-kee run, an offshoot of the kee-kee, combines whistles and lost yelps. Some young turkeys kee-kee into the spring as well. This is the soft, musical, 3-note lost call or “whistle” of poults in autumn and winter. Depending on terrain, wind and foliage, you can hear drumming 60 to 100 yards away. A tom drums in the spring to attract hens. One thought to be humming of a gobbler’s shimmying tail feathers, biologists now agree that the spit and drum is a melodious, two-note vocalization forced deep from a gobbler’s chest. When relaxed and close together, turkeys purr to signal contentment. Hens and gobblers utter this soft, fluttering call when feeding along. Cackles, which are made up fast, irregular clucks and yelps, are followed up with basic clucks as turkeys hit the ground and gather themselves after flight.

#Hen turkey sounds series

Hens cackle in 10- to 20-note series when flying up to and down from roost trees, and also when sailing across creeks, rivers, canyons and the like. A series of cutts lasts 5 to 15 seconds and is usually loud and aggressive. Lonely, lost or excited hens use fast, irregular clucks when searching for other turkeys, especially in the spring. Gobblers and hens utter one-syllable, soft to staccato notes to locate and communicate with other turkeys. Gobbler yelps are slower in cadence and often deeper-throated than hen yelps.Ī soft, short version of the basic yelp, turkeys tree call as they stir on their limbs each morning, saying to other birds in the area, “I’m up, and all’s well over here.” Two-note yelps-“kee-awk, kee-awk”-run the gamut from raspy to high-pitched. Turkeys yelp in rhythmic, 4- to 10-note series to locate other turkeys (shorter or longer yelping sequences are not uncommon). Nothing will get a turkey hunter fired up quicker than a gobble – the turkey’s signature call. Mature toms are well versed in gobbling, but jakes learning the mating call often toss out a weird-sounding mix of gobbles and squawky yelps. Toms sometimes gobble to keep tabs on one another on warm autumn days. A typical gobble is loud and aggressive, though it lasts only one or two seconds. Toms gobble in the Spring primarily to attract hens, but also to exude their dominance over subdominant males. The gobble is the sound most people associate with turkeys. It is important for turkey hunters to understand these vocalizations to better understand the mood of the turkeys they are hunting, and also to know when to use each one. Here are the primary vocalizations that hens and gobblers utter throughout the year. It consists of 28 different turkey calls, each with a message.

hen turkey sounds

All five subspecies of American turkeys have the same vocabulary.








Hen turkey sounds