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How to Make a Turkey Gobble: 7 Pro Tips for Calling in Longbeards

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As a turkey hunter hearing a tom turkey gobble in response to your calls is one of the most exciting sounds out there. A gobbling turkey reveals his location and signals his interest in the hen you’re imitating. With spring turkey season here, every hunter wants to know how to get a shock gobble and make a longbeard come running.

In this article we’ll cover 7 proven tips and tactics for eliciting gobbling responses from tom turkeys. Master these turkey calling techniques and you’ll tag more longbeards this season.

1. Locate Roosted Toms the Night Before

The easiest time to make a tom turkey gobble is at first light when he’s still on the roost. You want to pinpoint his location the evening before so you can set up close by and make him sound off.

Here are two effective roosting tactics

  • Owl Hooting: Imitate an owl hoot after fly-up and listen for answering gobbles. Mark those spots for morning setups.

  • Roost Watching: Position yourself to see fly-up areas like open fields 30 minutes before dusk. Watch for toms flying up to tree limbs and note the locations.

Once you’ve identified a roosted tom, sneak in well before daylight and get set up 100 yards or less away. Then you’ll be ready to make that tom gobble at sunrise.

2. Use Locator Calls to Elicit Shock Gobbles

Locator calls like crows, owls, coyotes, or gobble calls are excellent for triggering reflexive shock gobbles. Loud, sudden calls will often make a tom gobble and give up his position.

Try these tips when using locators:

  • Blow the calls loudly and sharply to get a response. Timid calling won’t cut it.

  • Make the call twice in quick succession to increase response.

  • Target areas where a tom could be – don’t randomly call everywhere.

  • Crow and owl calls are best for working in a gobbling bird. Coyotes and gobbles can make them shut up.

  • Work ridges, field edges, and other hot spots with locator calls until you get an answer. Then move in quickly while he’s fired up.

3. Follow Up with Realistic Hen Calls

Once you’ve pinpointed a gobbling tom’s location, it’s time to make him think a willing hen is coming his way. Switch to hen calls like yelps, clucks, and purrs to keep him interested and draw him in.

Here are some expert tips for realistic hen calling:

  • Call more initially when far away, then call less as he gets closer. Real hens don’t call nonstop.

  • Use excited fast yelps when he gobbles. Switch to contented purrs and clucks as he nears.

  • Vary your call volume, starting softer then getting louder when he responds. Whisper when he’s close.

  • Move your calling position and use a decoy for added realism.

Keep him gobbling and convinced that the hen of his dreams is on the way. He’ll come looking for love.

4. Spark Gobbles with Aggressive Fighting Purrs

The breeding season is also fight season for tom turkeys. Toms will battle rivals to establish dominance and breed hens.

You can use loud, angry sounding “fighting purrs” to trigger a tom’s competitive nature and get him gobbling. Here’s how:

  • Make the call fast, loud and furious like two hens about to throw down.

  • Focus on areas where two toms could be, like a property line.

  • After the purr exchange, use excited yelps like the hens are now seeking mates.

A tom will often gobble repeatedly when he thinks other males are moving in on his hens. Use this jealous reaction to your advantage.

5. Pull in Silent Toms with Soft Tree Yelps

Some savvy old gobblers will go silent after fly down and won’t shock gobble at calls. They let lusty young toms do all the hollering.

In this case, try using extremely soft tree yelps mimicking a hen on the nest. Make just enough sound to grab his attention.

Here are some tips on soft tree yelps:

  • Use a diaphragm call and barely blow enough air to produce subtle sounds.

  • Make the yelps sporadic and unpredictable, not rhythmic.

  • Focus on calling near thick cover, not wide open areas. He needs to be close to hear it.

  • Be ready to shoot quickly when he emerges to check out the hen sounds.

As a last resort, soft tree yelping can pull in tight-lipped toms not gobbling aggressively. Catch him by surprise.

6. Scout Fresh Sign for Silent Setups

If an area isn’t producing gobbles, scout for fresh turkey sign like tracks, dusting bowls, and strut marks. Setting up where the birds are is better than calling randomly.

Some scouting tips:

  • Look for food sources like fields of new green growth that will draw in turkeys.

  • Check for scratchings in leaves where turkeys have been feeding on insects and acorns.

  • Inspect muddy creek crossings for big turkey tracks – toms follow hens to water.

  • Listen for subtle gobbles, clucks and putting sounds signaling nearby birds.

Even if turkeys aren’t gobbling, you can still kill them. Scout fresh sign to be where they want to be.

7. Hunt All Day Long

One mistake many hunters make is giving up too early if morning calling is unproductive. As the saying goes, it ain’t over ’til it’s over.

Stay after them all day with this persistent mindset:

  • Stay mobile hitting unpressured areas – don’t just sit in one spot.

  • Target mid-day food sources and strut zones to intercept traveling toms.

  • Use locator calls regularly in case a silent tom has moved in.

  • As temperatures warm, focus efforts near watering holes and dusting areas.

  • Sit tight on fly-down spots late in the day to ambush returning birds.

Remember, a tom might only gobble once all day. But if it happens in range, game over.

As you can see, making a longbeard gobble takes skill, woodsmanship, and understanding turkey vocalizations and behaviors. Apply these turkey calling strategies during spring hunting and you’ll be rewarded with more responsive, callable toms and filled tags. Nothing compares to the heart-pounding thrill of a fired-up tom thundering into your setup. Let him know you’re there and the rest is in the bag.

how to make a turkey gobble

Still, Love is In the Air

While the toms in a given area might not gobble as often as they used to, that doesnt mean they arent interested in finding hens. Over the past several years, weve noticed that if we can get a tom to answer us from the roost, sooner or later he will probably swing by to check us out. Dr. Chamberlain says the research bears that out. We did a study where both male birds and cooperating hunters were GPS-tracked throughout the season. What we found was that, while they might not come straight in, birds were going to the exact same spots that hunters were calling from earlier in the day. The bird might fly down and circle the area, it might take 3 or 4 hours to happen, but eventually that gobbler went to where he had heard the hunters call earlier in the morning.

If a hunter is patient enough, and if his or her butt can stand it, they can take advantage of this style of hunting simply by finding a good tree, sitting down, and waiting. Im not that patient, and Im way too old and out of shape to sit still on the ground for that long.

Our gear setup for this type of hunting consist of a roomy pop-up blind like the Summit Viper, along with a comfortable seat like the ALPS OutdoorZ Folding Chair. Our early season decoy setup includes a quarter- or half-strut jake, a laydown hen and an upright hen. We place the upright hen at 30 yards, and position the jake over the laydown hen about 20 to 25 yards out in front of the blind. The jake should face toward the blind. Most of the time a gobbler will turn his back to the blind to face the decoy, allowing the hunter to position for the shot. Later in the season, after the peak breeding has passed, we leave the jake and laydown hen in the truck and just go with a single upright hen for interest.

I have had the best luck with calling every 15 to 30 minutes, just a few yelps and purrs, to let any nearby toms know Im in the area. If you can get a hen to answer your calls, try to engage her by repeating the tone and cadence of her calls back to her. Nothing draws in the gobblers like the sound of a pair of hens jawing back and forth at each other. Then, you settle in and wait.

Would I rather strike a hot gobbler along a ridgetop, rush to set up against a nearby tree and call him in? You bet. Its a more exciting way to hunt. But if you are faced with quiet, pressured birds, or are hunting small properties, then employing the sit and wait approach can be way more effective.

And it sure beats sitting at the house and complaining because the turkeys didnt gobble that morning.

More Realtree turkey hunting.

Do today’s turkeys gobble less? Many hunters think so, and some biologists do too. But that doesn’t mean you can’t still have fun hunting them

It had been a long three hours. We had slipped in well before daylight and popped out a blind along the ridgetop pasture. Our quiet yelps had gone unanswered since sunrise. We knew there were toms in the area; wed watched them fly up while scouting the evening before, and they had gobbled hard from the roost, just down the ridge, at sunrise. The tracks and droppings that littered the dirt road in front of us told us we were set up in what should be a productive area.

My youngest son, Potroast, craned his neck around to look out the side window of the blind and whispered, There he is! A hundred yards, coming our way. Fast! The big gobbler soon appeared in front of the blind. By that time, he was 60 yards away. Hed seen our decoys, a quarter strut jake and two hens, and was intent on breaking up their party.

Potroast eased his shotgun barrel up to the front window of the blind. The big tom was nearly running now, his beard swinging back and forth with each step. When he hit our decoy setup at 20 yards, he slid to a halt and hit full strut in a single motion. I yelped quietly. The big bird dropped strut and lifted his head to locate the hen hed just heard. Potroast pulled the trigger.

Over the past few years, that scene has played out countless times for me, my wife, and our three kids. We started hunting from blinds when the kids were young, but even after they were old enough to sit still next to a tree, we stuck with them. Our area of the state is mostly made up of a patchwork of small farms, many under 50 acres. Many of the places we hunt could be walked in 20 minutes, and if the birds were two farms over while we were there, we left empty-handed.

But since we knew the turkeys would cross the farm we were hunting at some point during the day, we simply adopted the deer stand approach of popping up a blind and waiting. It wasnt as exciting as the classic run-and-gun approach I grew up with — but it was a good way to kill turkeys on small properties.

Along the way, we started to notice something. Birds like the one described above would often come in silently, never making a gobble after they had flown down from the roost. Other hunters I talked to across the Midwest and Southeast mentioned the same thing. Turkeys just didnt gobble like they used to.

When I started chasing turkeys back in the mid-80s, Kentuckys population was on the rise and birds were eager to come to a call. They would gobble at anything that sounded like a yelp, and often come from long distances to investigate what they thought was an interested hen.

But over the last few years, turkey populations have peaked in a lot of areas and started to decline in others. It seems to be harder to get a tom to gobble in the morning, making them tougher to hunt. Those quiet birds were the topic of many a conversation among friends and other turkey hunters we ran into over the course of a season. Were the birds really gobbling less?

Some experts say they are. Mark Hatfield, wildlife biologist and turkey researcher with the NWTF, says turkeys typically gobble the most after the peak of nesting occurs, when there are fewer available hens to breed. With season openers happening earlier and earlier, particularly in the southeastern U.S., many birds never make it to that point of the season now.

In one 4-year study, we found that up to 60% of the male harvest in some areas occurred before the peak of breeding season, Hatfield says. That means a lot of the gobblers in an area get killed before they would hit their busiest gobbling time of the year.

These early seasons can also alter turkey breeding behavior. Turkeys spend all winter and early spring establishing a pecking order among toms, says Hatfield. The dominant bird in an area is going to do the bulk of the gobbling. When that bird gets taken right at the beginning of breeding season, the next bird in line doesnt just step up to take his place. The fight to re-establish a new pecking order starts all over, and it might take weeks, or even longer, for a new dominant tom to ascend. If that bird gets killed, it starts over again, meaning season is long over by the time the boss bird in an area would start gobbling.

And the turkeys might just be learning, too. Dr. Mike Chamberlain, professor at the Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources at the University of Georgia, is one of the leading turkey researchers in the nation. Its no secret that hunting pressure causes animals to change behavior, he says. Hunted birds are gobbling less often. One study of male turkeys in South Carolina, Georgia and Louisiana found that birds still gobbled well on roost, but birds in areas open to hunting gobbled less frequently on the ground than those in non-hunted populations.

Hunters might even be training birds not to gobble. Turkey hunters naturally target the most aggressive gobbling bird in an area. Over several years, selectively removing these birds has left an older male population of turkeys that have been trained not to gobble. Our data now shows that birds gobble pre- and post season more than in years past, but gobbling activity slows way down during the hunting season, Chamberlain says.

How To Call Turkeys For Beginners & Basic Calling Strategy

FAQ

What to do when turkeys don’t gobble?

If you’ve scouted well and know that there are turkeys in the area, or have heard them clucking nearby, talk to them. Concentrate on winning — or whining — the hens nearer, and they’ll bring the gobbler along.

What conditions make turkeys gobble?

We used state‐space modeling to investigate the effects of weather variables on daily gobbling activity. Our findings suggest rainfall, greater wind speeds, and greater temperatures negatively affected gobbling activity, whereas increasing barometric pressure positively affected gobbling activity.

How do you stop a Gobbler from gobbling?

If hunting alone, try running a diaphragm (mouth) call and a friction call to make it sound like two hens. If a gobbler is gobbling but then hangs up, go silent (stop calling), and he might just come into range. Be patient and avoid the temptation to keep calling at him just to make him gobble again.

How do you make a gobbler call a hen?

Calling in tandem with a hunting partner can add realism. Imagine that you are both hen turkeys calling to each other. If hunting alone, try running a diaphragm (mouth) call and a friction call to make it sound like two hens. If a gobbler is gobbling but then hangs up, go silent (stop calling), and he might just come into range.

Do turkeys gobble Another Day?

However, many more do survive to gobble another day by strutting in an advantageous spot while waiting for amenable hens to come to them. Turkey behavior and their vocalizations are an inexact science, but gobbling takes it to another level.

What if a gobbler hangs up?

If a gobbler is gobbling but then hangs up, go silent (stop calling), and he might just come into range. Be patient and avoid the temptation to keep calling at him just to make him gobble again. If a gobbler hangs up he’s likely expecting the hen to come to him. Now you need to out wait him and let curiosity get the better of him.

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