Originally posted by Jamesbo
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Turkey chokes
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When I was a younger man lead was outlawed for ducks. The steel loads back then sucked bad. So we thought the bigger the pellet the better off we would be. Over the years steel shot got better and my understanding of shotguns grew. I like the smallest pellet that will do the job. I like as many of those small pellets as I can get on a target. So with that being said I have no problem stepping off a distance of 30 yards and handing my wife a heavy dove load and telling her, "When that bird gets to here, nail him". They go down like a sledge hammer hit them. You can kill a cow with a dove load at 15 yards if you hit it in the right place. At 15 yards your pattern is not that large.
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Originally posted by SaltwaterSlick View PostWhatever you use for goose hunting will work just fine on turkeys with that SBEII. No need for anything special, and the same ammo too... If I were you, I'd be practicing my calling more that worrying about how FAR I can shoot one... I like that 15 yard shot shotgun OR bow...
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Originally posted by RyanC26 View PostI was looking at the Jelly Head. Up close does it do to much damage?
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I have the Benelli Vinci. Nothing wrong with the factory tubes at all !
But because I’m me, and my love for Terror choke tubes that I use for geese hunting, I bought a xtra full Terror tube for my gun. It shoots great no doubt, but can’t say it dominates my factory tube.
I do however feel Hevi Shot #5’s stone anything in its path ! I shoot #3 for geese and 5 for turkey [emoji884]. I’ve dropped the Black Cloud and Winchester Supreme and Remington loads for Hevi Shot.
One other thing I’ve noticed. Different loads pattern differently as well. Gotta put em all on paper to check.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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FYI
Even with the best recoil pad I could buy, patenting my turkey gun was my worst day of shooting ever. I tried several super heavy loads and the recoil was no fun.
Now I just call them close with 2 3/4” and put the CROSSHAIRS on his upper neck
You can laugh at my scope, but I have been killing birds for 30 years with it
Camo’ed, Sling, full tube of extra shells and I am good to go.
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Grew up hunting turkeys in FL, we used standard full choke barrel in an 870 with 2 3/4", 1 1/4oz of lead 5 shot. We always head shot gobblers, not the shoot them in the middle of the body with a great cloud of feathers like the hunting shows. If, I had ever done that, it would have been a butt whooping not a high five and we didn't even know we were hunting the special Osceola turkey. Lol
A good turkey putt and he will have his head up high. We have killed scores and scores of turkeys using this load all over the country.
Also, unlike the turkey shows and the marketing of special choke tubes and loads that are "now required" to kill a turkey. My Dad taught me that if the gobbler wasn't within 15 yards, you hadn't really called it in and shouldn't be shooting at it, period.
Spend more time on learning turkey behaviours and calling, also how to hide and not move and you will be killing them within 15 yards, which is much more satisfying than 30+ yard shots which often just results in a wounded turkey. Even, with the "required chokes and loads".
Get one in really close one time, then watch listen to him for a few minutes and you won't want to do it any other way. Good luck
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One of my old hunting buddies uses a .410 bore for turkey hunting and #6 shot. He calls 'em in to within 20 yards or less and shoots 'em in the head. He told me a turkey's head is as big as a dove, and we have dove hunted with .410's for over 30 years... rest of that turkey's body don't matter. Shoot his dove sized head. Easy as shooting a dove sitting on a fence post...
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