Primitive Archer
Main Discussion Area => Arrows => Topic started by: coyote pup on December 21, 2009, 12:06:29 pm
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I was thinking of trying to stick a "put-put" this spring and I was wondering. What kind of point is best to use? What has worked best for you guys that hunt turkeys?
Thanks
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I just use a good sharp 2 blade broad head. :)
Pappy
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I used a stone point.
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hell ive used 7/8ths wide broadheads and even the 4" gobbler guillotine blades
cant use stone here
sharp blades,very sharp blades but remember more than anything shot placement is very criticle with turkeys
thier vital are is very small,roughly the size of a golf ball.
head/neck shots make for less wounded birds running around(thats all i take anymore)
if you can get them walking away from you,you can shoot them in the back and hope to spine them
i avoid side shots thru the wings with a bow.them wings are like armour.they can stop all kinds of stuff.
i shot one this year with my 12 ga at 13 yds,found bb's caught in the wing feathers.that was a 3" turkey mag too.
goodluck chasing them buzzards :)
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Tim, I wouldn't want to try grabbing one flapping and flipping with a sharp broadhead hanging out. I got lucky when I hit mine. I cut the main artery coming from the heart, but he still flew 25,30 yards and walked around for about 5 minutes before he fell over. I shot a turkey last year with #6 shot. When I cleaned it I couldn't believe all the different size shot stuck under it's skin from previous hunters.
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Yep. I've heard all kinds of amazing stories about how they were able to take a hit and keep on a truckin' (or flyin' as the case may be). So I wanted to ask and see what kinds of points were tried and true. I guess it ain't so much the point as the shot placement, which actually I'm glad to hear. I'd hate to gimp one up in the wing. It's reassuring to know that it's pretty much an all-or-nothing at the base of the neck or just below.
I'm looking forward to trying my skill against the tasty buzzard. It'll be my first time going out for him. Thanks for all the replies ;)
Yote Pup
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A shot through the hips or legs will work, too. They have to be able to run before they can take off flying. So, while they are flopping, you can beat them with your bow. ;D
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Yeah, that'd work too! ;D I'm not sure how they did it, and why the turkeys didn't fly away, but in Geronimo's book "In His Own Words" he says that they used to round turkeys up on horseback and just club them - no shooting involved. ??? Kind of sounds like that method ;)
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HEy Coyote,
I killed a gobbler back in april 2007 with my bow, and I used a stone point. When the turkey came in, I aimed for a spot where 2 different feather types formed a "V", and I aimed for the point of the V. It was broadside, but it was low, just below the wing but above the drumstick. The stone point missed the lungs (it was too far back) but it severed a major artery. that bird only ran 40 feet, stopped, sat down in the grass, and died. I was absolutely amazed at how fast that stone point killed that bird.
I agree with what others have said here....don't shoot a turkey in the wing, especially with a stone point. Those wings are like damn armor, and their bones are surprisingly heavy and stout in the wing. Aim for just under the wing, and a broadhead or stone point should be effective.
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I've shot 3 with knapped points Imade but I use zwicky 2 blades.The same set up as I se for deer.
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How about expoding tips? Something that when it goes off the bird turns to mist. LOL, Sounds like tough birds.
VB
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Heres a few pictures my sister-in-law took in her yard. Turkeys are tough as all I can figure is he got that stick stuck in him while fighting. The stick eventually worked its way out and he lived just fine through it all.
[attachment deleted by admin]
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yup,if its just in the breast meat then it dont really do much to them
not much blood flow thru there,once the muscle heals back up they are fine
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dang look at all them arrow fletchs