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Successful Turkey Hunting Is All about Attitude

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Editor’s Note: Ronnie “Cuz” Strickland, Mossy Oak’s senior vice president of television and related media, probably has hunted turkeys as long and as hard as any man alive. He hunts for his own enjoyment, but in the early days of Mossy Oak, he was a cameraman, field producer, guide and caller. One of Cuz’s greatest joys in life is calling up a turkey for someone else to take. Cuz has hunted turkeys all over the world and in most states. When Cuz talks turkey, we all listen. 

Some of the best turkey hunters I’ve ever been fortunate enough to hunt with aren’t boastful. They’re humble, and they love to learn about turkey hunting from other people. If you have the opportunity to hunt with turkey hunters you know are better than you, and if you see them use a call, a tactic or do something different than you do, then you need to take note of that. 

Also, good turkey hunters are relentless. Even if they’ve hunted all morning and haven’t heard a turkey gobble, but the time is 9:00 am, if you’re hunting with them, you’re tired, you’re ready to go back to the truck and get something to eat, a turkey hunter with the right attitude will say, “Do you see that big mountain right there?” You nod, and he whispers back to you, “I really believe, if we can get to the top of that mountain, I can make a turkey call.” 

TurkeySecretsCuz4_llHalf the time a turkey hunter like this may not even be carrying a gun. He may be a cameraman, a guide or a friend who has gone hunting with you to try and help you take a turkey. I’ve seen turkey hunters with the right attitudes lay on their stomachs and crawl through cow manure to peep over into a pasture and see if there’s a gobbler out there strutting. I’ve seen turkey hunters with the right attitudes who won’t stop when they come to a creek with knee-high or waist-high water. They’ll go across that creek and be soaking wet trying to get to a turkey. The turkey hunter who will stay with a gobbler that’s refusing to come in for 2 or 3 hours - he’s got the right attitude. Turkey hunters who have the right attitude aren’t as much about taking turkeys as they are about having encounters with turkeys. 

When I go turkey hunting, if I hear one turkey gobble, if I can get close enough to see him, I’m victorious, whether I get the shot or not. Turkey hunting isn’t always turkey shooting. Turkey hunting is attempting to locate a turkey, trying to understand where the turkey’s going and why he’s going there, attempting to out-maneuver a turkey, trying to get close enough to see that longbeard, having an opportunity to talk to that turkey and fooling that bird, so he thinks you’re a turkey hen and wants to come in close enough to see you. A turkey hunter with a right attitude will have a great turkey hunt every time he goes into the woods. If he harvests a gobbler, he’ll have a fantastic turkey hunt, and a memory that will last a lifetime. Your attitude, when you step out of the truck in that cool spring air and shut that truck door as quietly as possible, will have much more to do with your taking a turkey than your turkey calling will. 

When I put on my Mossy Oak camo before daylight to go turkey hunting, I’m also putting on my turkey-hunting attitude. This attitude is whatever I have to do, however far I have to walk, however wet I have to get, no matter how tall a mountain is – well, I won’t stop until I can see a gobbler, if there’s a gobbler to be seen. 

Day 3: Shut Up and Listen (for Turkeys)

Tomorrow: Find Another Turkey to Hunt

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