Cottage Craft Works Pages
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Turkey Calls | Turkey Box Call | Turkey Hunting
Turkey box calls Box calls create turkey sounds with the friction created by sliding the lid across the surface of the box. Box calls are convenient and are capable of producing more volume than any other type of turkey call. Tom Gaskins, of Cypress Knee Museum, Palmdale, Florida fame made and sold small wooden examples of these. He claimed that they often attracted bears looking for lunch as well as turkeys. Turkey friction calls Friction calls may be the most common turkey calls[citation needed] because they are easy to use and create lifelike turkey sounds. Friction calls feature a round (usually) surface, and the user creates sound by drawing a peg, or "striker", across the surface. Friction call surfaces can be slate, aluminum, glass or a variety of other materials. [1] - Commando Friction Call How To Video for Glass Slate and Aluminum lids. Push-pull turkey calls Push-pull turkey calls are the simplest of all turkey calls to use, and create realistic turkey sounds. A push-pull call functions by pushing and/or pulling a button on the end of the call, forcing a surface across a peg. Tube turkey calls The tube call is a popular caller for many of the nation's top turkey hunters. With it, a hunter can make virtually any sound in a turkey's vocabulary from yelps to purrs to gobbles. Tube calls consist of a small hollow barrel with latex fixed across half of the top with an elastic band. [edit]Wingbone turkey calls Wingbone calls originally were made from the wingbones of a turkey, and some still are. They are a suction-type call. Sounds are made with quick, forceful sucking motions, much like kissing the end of the call. Good wingbone calls make a hollow sounding yelp. Diaphragm turkey calls Diaphragm calls are inserted entirely in the user's mouth and require practice to learn to use correctly. Turkey locator calls Locators are calls used to force a tom turkey to gobble, thus giving away his location. Mature male turkeys will "shock gobble" at loud noises such as an owl's hoot, a crow's caw, a hawk's scream, a peacock bitch's call - even thunder or a train's whistle.