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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Long Beards & Spurs
Setup recommendations for Juvenile hunt.
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<blockquote data-quote="Urban_Hunter" data-source="post: 5594982" data-attributes="member: 12353"><p>On the juvi hunt specifically, you're not allowed legally to "split up"</p><p></p><p>The idea behind it is one of two scenarios. The first is that the Tom will likely hang up some distance from where he thinks the hen is. The Ol' 90-10 rule from your first kiss, I'll come 90% of the way, you come the rest. If you know where the gobbler is and can set up 75-80 yards closer to the Tom than the caller, then theoretically if he holds up 75-100 yards from the "hen" he'll be right in your pocket.</p><p></p><p>The next scenario is if the caller can set up behind a visual barrier, he can move around while making calls. The idea being the Tom can tell exactly where the hen is making the call. If it sounds like she's moving 20-30 yards every time she calls it makes it seem more natural. Same goes for scratching the ground. If the Tom has to come up and over a rise to get to the hen, but the shooter can be at the crest, then the caller can move around freely without being seen by the Tom, all while having to pass by the shooter before laying eyes on his prize. </p><p></p><p>Keep in mind turkeys are very predictable, dumb, and this works 100% of the time <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="😉" title="Winking face :wink:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f609.png" data-shortname=":wink:" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Urban_Hunter, post: 5594982, member: 12353"] On the juvi hunt specifically, you’re not allowed legally to “split up” The idea behind it is one of two scenarios. The first is that the Tom will likely hang up some distance from where he thinks the hen is. The Ol’ 90-10 rule from your first kiss, I’ll come 90% of the way, you come the rest. If you know where the gobbler is and can set up 75-80 yards closer to the Tom than the caller, then theoretically if he holds up 75-100 yards from the “hen” he’ll be right in your pocket. The next scenario is if the caller can set up behind a visual barrier, he can move around while making calls. The idea being the Tom can tell exactly where the hen is making the call. If it sounds like she’s moving 20-30 yards every time she calls it makes it seem more natural. Same goes for scratching the ground. If the Tom has to come up and over a rise to get to the hen, but the shooter can be at the crest, then the caller can move around freely without being seen by the Tom, all while having to pass by the shooter before laying eyes on his prize. Keep in mind turkeys are very predictable, dumb, and this works 100% of the time 😉 [/QUOTE]
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Long Beards & Spurs
Setup recommendations for Juvenile hunt.
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