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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Long Beards & Spurs
Fewer turkeys- debate- over a decade of harvest numbers....
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<blockquote data-quote="Bone Collector" data-source="post: 5328051" data-attributes="member: 7419"><p>You mean the best turkey county in the state has birds? I'm not trying to give you a hard time, but Maury is the best county followed by Williamson IMO. I saw 3 flocks on my way to work in Williamson county today. One flock had 40-60 birds with multiple strutters. One flock had 10 or so with 4 male birds 2 were strutting, and the other had 8-10 with 2 strutters. </p><p></p><p>The places that have historically had the most birds still look ok, except Giles like you pointed out. However, Wilson and Rutherford (depending on where you are) have started showing signs of decline. If it can happen there it can happen to any county. It's just a matter of time. Turkey hunting has gotten easier and that has brought a bunch of new people into the sport.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bone Collector, post: 5328051, member: 7419"] You mean the best turkey county in the state has birds? I'm not trying to give you a hard time, but Maury is the best county followed by Williamson IMO. I saw 3 flocks on my way to work in Williamson county today. One flock had 40-60 birds with multiple strutters. One flock had 10 or so with 4 male birds 2 were strutting, and the other had 8-10 with 2 strutters. The places that have historically had the most birds still look ok, except Giles like you pointed out. However, Wilson and Rutherford (depending on where you are) have started showing signs of decline. If it can happen there it can happen to any county. It's just a matter of time. Turkey hunting has gotten easier and that has brought a bunch of new people into the sport. [/QUOTE]
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Long Beards & Spurs
Fewer turkeys- debate- over a decade of harvest numbers....
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