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What a Hoot (Video Included)
Locater calls come in several “species”: owl, crow, coyote, woodpecker, etc. Carry several and try each one intermittently. Sometimes a gobbler may gobble back at a crow call but not an owl. It’s like trying different menu items. From one day to the next a gobbler’s “tastes” may differ. The only way to learn which call he’ll respond to is by trying several.
One of the best locater calls is a “hen squall”, which is a short series of excited cutts, then a cackle followed by a 4 or 5-note yelping series. I make this call with a loud mouth diaphragm call. I cut the squall off very sharply after the yelps. The loudness, excited nature and sharp cutoff are very effective for getting a gobbler to respond without thinking.
One more tip about using locater calls: don’t be timid. The purpose of using locater calls is to locate gobblers you didn’t know were around, or to get a better idea of a distant gobbler’s location. If he can’t hear you, he’s not going to respond. So “belt it out.” Perhaps you may scare a bird every now and then. But odds are good you’ll locate a lot more gobblers than you scare, so the benefits of being aggressive with locater calls far outweigh the negatives.
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