Southern Sportsman
Well-Known Member
I cannot get the search to work when I try to go back to 2017, so if anyone has the total numbers from last year, please post them.
megalomaniac":1ljum1at said:#1 this will be the lowest kill since turkey restoration completed
#2 TWRA will institute regulation changes to try to mitigate the population decline.
I hope I eat crow on #1, but I pray that #2- the regulation changes will be something meaningful, not just lowering limit or eliminating bearded hen killing. TN's turkeys NEED the season pushed back 2 weeks with the same ending date, and jakes need to be off limits. OFC, I'd love to see all hen killing eliminated, spring or fall, but we really need to let the hens initiate a fertile nest before we take out the LB's, especially in those areas with marginal populations.
Southern Sportsman":7irxikwp said:Also, the average spur length in TN has to be best in the country at 1.7"
Setterman":3m2py6yt said:Sad to see so many of the states I hunt in a noticeable decline, yet very few hunters are willing to sacrifice and the game agencies are burying their head in the sand. I've grown accustomed to the game agencies and the old breed of turkey hunters would do what's right, but this new generation could care less.
Shooter77":3t5lxk9a said:Setterman":3t5lxk9a said:Sad to see so many of the states I hunt in a noticeable decline, yet very few hunters are willing to sacrifice and the game agencies are burying their head in the sand. I've grown accustomed to the game agencies and the old breed of turkey hunters would do what's right, but this new generation could care less.
So your not just blaming TWRA for turkey decline? it's also happening in other states too. I've heard so many praise KY and now MO, but both experienced the same decline in kill numbers. Who do you think we should model our state after?
AT Hiker":3qbcup1f said:Southern Sportsman":3qbcup1f said:Also, the average spur length in TN has to be best in the country at 1.7"
I'd say we need to teach "reading a ruler 101" in hunter safety course[emoji14]
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Best part is spur size is inversely proportional to age. Jakes average 16" spurs and old birds average 1.7". :rotf:Southern Sportsman":261jf5nv said:Also, the average spur length in TN has to be best in the country at 1.7"
ADR":om6njyzb said:AT Hiker":om6njyzb said:Southern Sportsman":om6njyzb said:Also, the average spur length in TN has to be best in the country at 1.7"
I'd say we need to teach "reading a ruler 101" in hunter safety course[emoji14]
I wonder if many people were adding the two together to report?
I only report the longer of the two but have never read the actual recommendation.
knightrider":2d543lnf said:235 hens state wide, well there goes the hatch :stir:op:
Andy S.":ner0hvb1 said:Best part is spur size is inversely proportional to age. Jakes average 16" spurs and old birds average 1.7". :rotf:Southern Sportsman":ner0hvb1 said:Also, the average spur length in TN has to be best in the country at 1.7"
Didn't say it would help but it certainly isn't the reason for your decline, the 5-10 hen per year per county that get killed means absolutely nothing to the overall problem. It just doesn't work that waySouthern Sportsman":1b4gz0ue said:knightrider":1b4gz0ue said:235 hens state wide, well there goes the hatch :stir:op:
I'll bite.
I suspect the flock will survive. But those were just the bearded hens killed in the spring. There were another 442 hens killed last fall. Those 677 hens will now have a combined polt production of 0. Had they survived, they would have probably yeilded 1000-1500 polts. It may not eradicate the flock, but I'm anxious to hear your explination for how that helps a declining population?
knightrider":18warmee said:Didn't say it would help but it certainly isn't the reason for your decline, the 5-10 hen per year per county that get killed means absolutely nothing to the overall problem. It just doesn't work that waySouthern Sportsman":18warmee said:knightrider":18warmee said:235 hens state wide, well there goes the hatch :stir:op:
I'll bite.
I suspect the flock will survive. But those were just the bearded hens killed in the spring. There were another 442 hens killed last fall. Those 677 hens will now have a combined polt production of 0. Had they survived, they would have probably yeilded 1000-1500 polts. It may not eradicate the flock, but I'm anxious to hear your explination for how that helps a declining population?
knightrider":11gq1qc4 said:Didn't say it would help but it certainly isn't the reason for your decline, the 5-10 hen per year per county that get killed means absolutely nothing to the overall problem. It just doesn't work that waySouthern Sportsman":11gq1qc4 said:knightrider":11gq1qc4 said:235 hens state wide, well there goes the hatch :stir:op:
I'll bite.
I suspect the flock will survive. But those were just the bearded hens killed in the spring. There were another 442 hens killed last fall. Those 677 hens will now have a combined polt production of 0. Had they survived, they would have probably yeilded 1000-1500 polts. It may not eradicate the flock, but I'm anxious to hear your explination for how that helps a declining population?
knightrider":22y63qe3 said:It's laughable that people think 600 hens across an entire state the size of tn is the problem
Andy S.":5fjflybc said:Best part is spur size is inversely proportional to age. Jakes average 16" spurs and old birds average 1.7". :rotf:Southern Sportsman":5fjflybc said:Also, the average spur length in TN has to be best in the country at 1.7"
I've stated for years it's not just TN. Alabama has been in a steady decline, and it started for them once decoys became legal. Georgia faltered after legalizing baiting for deer. Ky saw a big drop this year.Shooter77":jllelclh said:Setterman":jllelclh said:Sad to see so many of the states I hunt in a noticeable decline, yet very few hunters are willing to sacrifice and the game agencies are burying their head in the sand. I've grown accustomed to the game agencies and the old breed of turkey hunters would do what's right, but this new generation could care less.
So your not just blaming TWRA for turkey decline? it's also happening in other states too. I've heard so many praise KY and now MO, but both experienced the same decline in kill numbers. Who do you think we should model our state after?
I'm up for any sacrifice that's needed to take care of the problem. what should we do.
Setterman":35ez9nx8 said:...What's hidden is that with the highly effective killing tools now it masks how bad it really is. That's the scariest part. ...
Setterman":31tgpthx said:I've stated for years it's not just TN. Alabama has been in a steady decline, and it started for them once decoys became legal. Georgia faltered after legalizing baiting for deer. Ky saw a big drop this year.Shooter77":31tgpthx said:Setterman":31tgpthx said:Sad to see so many of the states I hunt in a noticeable decline, yet very few hunters are willing to sacrifice and the game agencies are burying their head in the sand. I've grown accustomed to the game agencies and the old breed of turkey hunters would do what's right, but this new generation could care less.
So your not just blaming TWRA for turkey decline? it's also happening in other states too. I've heard so many praise KY and now MO, but both experienced the same decline in kill numbers. Who do you think we should model our state after?
I'm up for any sacrifice that's needed to take care of the problem. what should we do.
I think all states in other words are boobing this up. It's not just one thing that's occurring imo. It's a combination of lower poult production and turkey hunters being far more effective killers.
What's hidden is that with the highly effective killing tools now it masks how bad it really is. That's the scariest part.
With decoys, reaping, blinds, tss, etc we as hunters are much deadlier than we were 10 years ago. However, none of the states have adjusted for our effectiveness. There's so many birds being taken that in years gone by would've survived. Therefore we are leaving less breeders and less seed stock.
There's no question something bad is happening, yet TWRA KYDNR GADNR etc aren't changing jack poop, and just keeping the status quo.
You want change? Sacrifice is in order. Start with corn for deer, trail cams etc. Next move the season back 2 weeks and drop the limit to 2, no jakes, no hens ever, no decoys, and open the slaughter on nest raiders. Do something rather than just shrug your shoulders or deny there's an issue.
knightrider":1u3k81qm said:It's laughable that people think 600 hens across an entire state the size of tn is the problem
Setterman":2zaznmql said:I've stated for years it's not just TN. Alabama has been in a steady decline, and it started for them once decoys became legal. Georgia faltered after legalizing baiting for deer. Ky saw a big drop this year.Shooter77":2zaznmql said:Setterman":2zaznmql said:Sad to see so many of the states I hunt in a noticeable decline, yet very few hunters are willing to sacrifice and the game agencies are burying their head in the sand. I've grown accustomed to the game agencies and the old breed of turkey hunters would do what's right, but this new generation could care less.
So your not just blaming TWRA for turkey decline? it's also happening in other states too. I've heard so many praise KY and now MO, but both experienced the same decline in kill numbers. Who do you think we should model our state after?
I'm up for any sacrifice that's needed to take care of the problem. what should we do.
I think all states in other words are boobing this up. It's not just one thing that's occurring imo. It's a combination of lower poult production and turkey hunters being far more effective killers.
What's hidden is that with the highly effective killing tools now it masks how bad it really is. That's the scariest part.
With decoys, reaping, blinds, tss, etc we as hunters are much deadlier than we were 10 years ago. However, none of the states have adjusted for our effectiveness. There's so many birds being taken that in years gone by would've survived. Therefore we are leaving less breeders and less seed stock.
There's no question something bad is happening, yet TWRA KYDNR GADNR etc aren't changing jack poop, and just keeping the status quo.
You want change? Sacrifice is in order. Start with corn for deer, trail cams etc. Next move the season back 2 weeks and drop the limit to 2, no jakes, no hens ever, no decoys, and open the slaughter on nest raiders. Do something rather than just shrug your shoulders or deny there's an issue.
Is a bigger issue for the turkey than most realize...Setterman":3c7atgkq said:Start with corn for deer
scn":pkky0ww7 said:Here is the TWRA link to all of the Commissioners: https://www.tn.gov/content/tn/twra/tenn ... .html#meet
The TFWC meeting where they will vote on the hunting season for the next two years is this Thursday afternoon with the vote on Friday morning. If you can't go to voice your opinion on the turkey season, each of their email addresses is there when you click on each name. I can about assure you that a flurry of email activity requesting a more restricted season than recommended by TWRA will be read, and just might carry some weight. By the same token, doing nothing beyond voicing concerns on social media like TNDeer will do nothing to move towards some changes. Your choice.
I've been told that comments that are relatively short, POLITE, and to the point usually are the best received.