After making several fruitless forays into the turkey woods, both here in Erie and back home (Youngsville), the season was beginning to wind down and Geroge and I still both had our 2nd tags in our pockets.
The birds that we'd hunted the most, and therefore knew the most about, also knew the most about us apparently, and had become very wary. We had "gently" bumped them on the roost one morning, by that I mean we didn't blow them off the roost but they definitely knew something was up. They immediately stopped what had been a gobbling frenzy, then flew down into the creek bottom (when they normally stayed on top, which is where we were waiting).

The day I hunted with my dad in Youngsville, George went back in to our usual spot near the
roost and the birds were back and vocal again. However, as soon as he made a call to them, they shut up and then flew down and headed away from him, throwing a couple courtesy gobbles his direction.
He heard birds off and on throughout the morning, but couldn't make anything happen.
Monday George and I talked and formulated a new plan. He was going to go in and try to roost the birds, as we had been informed that they were spending some time across the road now.
If he could put them to bed, we were on for in the morning. If they didn't show up, we had to come up with another option.
Just as it was getting dark, my cell phone rang. It was George, and when I answered, the first words he said to me were "We're on!" He then went on to tell me how the birds were in fact, hanging out across the road, but just a few minutes before dark, 3 big toms came running past his truck, crossed the field, and went to their normal roosts! 1 bird broke off while still in the field about 100 yards south of the main roost, while the other 2 walked within 10 yards of George in order to fly up about 60 yards from the field corner. He slipped out quietly, got to his truck, and called me. It was now time to plan our strategy since we knew the birds were going to be there in the morning.
Since it seemed like everytime we had hunted them lately, they were very wary of our presence, it seemed like the only approach was to conceal our presence completely. We'd go in early as usual, no head lamps, keep the calls put away, no decoys, and set up in that field corner. To them, it'd be just another day in the woods with no intrusion that they knew of.
At 5 AM the next morning, I roll into George's driveway and the house is DARK. OH NO! I knew he was still asleep and started calling him. His personal cell phone didn't awake him but his work phone did!
"I'M UP!!!! I'll be out in 2 minutes!!!" George hissed into the phone so as not to wake his wife. A few minutes later, he comes out of the house, camo on, gun in hand. We're good to go!
He jumps in the truck, we drive around the block and get out of the truck. Wondering whether or not to take the video camera, George solves that by saying "Leave the damn camera in the truck, we got birds to kill!" So I left it. (Remember what happened when we left it because of the "impending" rainstorm earlier in the year?)
We hustle down the edge of the field, being careful not to break any sticks, and ease up to a large oak that will hide both of us well, just inside the woods along the edge of the field. This is the same tree I filmed George's hunt from, and it puts us smack in between where the single gobbler roosted (behind us) and where the pair of gobblers roosted (directly in front of us). We slip on our facemasks and gloves and get comfortable while waiting for daylight.
It's getting light enough that the birds are usually gobbling by now, but we haven't heard a peep. Then, in the distance I hear it. The train. These birds LOVE to gobble at the train as it blows it's horn at the road crossings. "Come on dammit! Gobble! You love to gobble at the train!" I say. George chuckles and whispers "Yeah, you love the train! Gobble dammit!" The train blows it's whistle again...GOOOBBBBBLEE! Yeah! That's what we wanted to hear and from the roost in front of us too! From then on, the bird gobbled at just about everything as it steadily grew lighter out.
It's near flydown time and we're ready. Our guns are propped on our knees, we're sitting still, waiting to hear wing beats or catch movement inside the woods in the direction of the roost. Suddenly, a gobble rings out BEHIND US, out in the field! The single bird from last night is on the scene!
I tell George, "Get ready, somethings going to happen really quickly now! Once the shooting starts, don't stop until there are dead turkeys on ground!" Just then we can hear a bird pitch out of the tree in front of us and in a matter of seconds I can see a white head coming through the trees in our direction.
The bird behind us in the field gobbles again and the one I'm watching approaches the field edge, walking briskly. It's my turn to shoot as George shot the last bird, and I have 2 openings to shoot into. The tom I'm focusing on makes it to the field and enters the first opening. I ask George if he can see another bird coming as this one is wasting no time and I'm going to have to shoot sooner than later. He says he can't but to wait. I continue swinging on the bird as it passes through the first opening and goes behind a small stand of saplings.
As he begins to enter the next opening, I'm getting anxious and tell George I'm going to have to shoot quickly or I won't be able to. He tells me he can't see another bird coming and to go ahead and take the shot.
At 25 yards, this shot should be cake, but the birds walking quickly and it's kind of hunched up. I try putting to bring his head up but, there's no stopping him. I hold just in front of his wattles and pull the trigger. The Benelli SBE barks and the bird goes straight....UP! He's flapping his wings and George's Winchester sends a load of number 5's just before I shoot again! Feathers fly off the bird and George and I both him hit again, finally piling him up!

As I run out to grab the still flapping bird, George yells "You MISSED?! How did you miss?!" "No way I missed!" I yell back, as he comes walking over to me. We both have a good laugh over the excitement of the hunt and the way it went down and look the bird over.
The biggest spurs I've ever seen adorn the gobblers legs. Closer inspection reveals my first shot was right where I aimed, on the wattles, but a little far forward. From the blood pumping from the area, it would've been a fatal hit, it just wasn't fatal immediately.
We gather up the bird, our pile of spent shells, and take some pictures, then head for the truck. After getting home, I hang the bird up and put the tape to him. He's got a 9" beard, 1 1/8" spurs, and weighed in just over 17 lbs.
The first time I've killed 2 birds in the spring and they're both long beards! I'm a happy hunter!
That wraps up our spring hunt. George got out another time or two and came close, but wasn't able to seal the deal on his last gobbler. We're both already looking forward to next spring though!