Unless you choose broadheads designed for head and neck shots on wild turkeys, you must have an excellent understanding of your quarry’s anatomy to be successful with body shots.
Field dressing a wild turkey isn’t difficult, but it can be intimidating if you’re new to turkey hunting.
When it comes to turkey ammo, most hunters choose between 3- and 3.5-inch loads. Is there a significant difference?
The key to avoiding the eyes of approaching wild turkeys is making sure you pick the right spot to sit.
You’re in the field with a shotgun, and wild turkeys are big on-the-ground targets, so there’s no way you can miss, right? Wrong.
Vast improvements in shotgun design and ammunition have made measurable performance differences. Does a .410 make sense for turkey hunters?
Patience is the key to recovering a bow-shot gobbler. Here's why.
You don’t have to be a champion caller to kill a wild turkey. Here are four tips to increase the odds of tagging your first tom or jake this spring.
The usual bowhunting tips and tactics don’t work on experienced old turkeys. Here’s what does.
South Florida’s turkey season is the first one to open in the continental United States, and this video from opening day, March 6, 2021 showcases the Sunshine State in all its gobbling glory.
Doubling on wild turkeys is difficult with archery gear, but it’s even tougher when two hunters share one bow.
Sometimes you miss a wild turkey and have trouble finding your arrow. Spoiler: That doesn’t happen here.
The author explains why it makes sense to carry broadheads and arrows designed for head/neck shots and models for body shots every time you pursue wild turkeys.
Think you’ve seen just about everything when it comes to turkey hunting footage? Trust us, you’ve never seen anything like this video.
Killing a turkey with archery gear is a challenge, but you can up your odds if you avoid this one common heat-of-the-moment mistake.
Tired of whiffed shots or tracking turkeys after a marginal body hit? Try these tips.
To increase your odds of tagging a turkey this spring, avoid these three common bowhunting blunders.
You don’t need a ground blind for bowhunting turkeys. The key is hiding behind one or two strutting decoys.
If you want to step away from the typical sit-in-place ground blind system this spring, then give bow-mounted turkey decoys a try.
This spring while bowhunting turkeys, the author won’t pass shot opportunities on jakes. Will you?