DIY Planning Tips for Your Out-of-State Spring Turkey Hunt

Turkey Blog with Steve Hickoff

DIY Planning Tips for Your Out-of-State Spring Turkey Hunt

Posted 2018-12-04T05:11:00Z

Have You Started Planning Your Spring Turkey Hunts?

You're thinking about spring turkey hunting away from home. The time to plan is now.

Turkeys to Hunt

Does the state have good turkey populations? Think of this first before planning your trip. A state with high bird numbers might mean greater hunter competition, of course, especially on public land. Then again, wouldn't you rather hunt a place with high gobbler numbers than not? Kill data of a consistent trend can help you determine what location to hunt in such states as well. If you're lucky, the state has town and county information (this if often true for northeastern states). Other locations, where registration isn't required, might just estimate both turkey kill and flock populations. This is where asking a buddy who has turkey hunted the state can help.

First, you need turkeys to hunt. And then . . . (Realtree/John Hafner/Heartland Bowhunter photo)

Public-Land Access

Is there room to hunt? Huge tracts of public land still exist in many parts of turkey country, especially out West, and even in the crowded northeastern states. Study up on these places. Call state wildlife agencies to get tips on newer public-land purchases. Also be sure to read up on land access for non-residents and how you might gain landowner permission before or when visiting to hunt. When combined with a cheap motel (or camping) and cooking your own food, public-land hunts might be the most affordable of all as a planned package deal goes. Want to hunt a spring turkey state without much public-land access? Sometimes you can work out abbreviated pay-as-you-go stays with outfitters on a daily basis. It doesn't hurt to ask.

Hunts You Can Afford

Let's face facts: Some states encourage non-resident turkey hunters with reasonable license and permit pricing. Others seem to discourage it with lofty fees per license and individual turkey permits. This often prompts the old joke from non-hunters about getting a frozen bird at the grocer's being easier and cheaper. Still, we turkey hunters are not only chasing the great American game bird, but also the place, the experience, and so forth. You know what I'm talking about. Study the total cost of what it'll take you to hunt that state, including the air fare or gasoline to get there. Hit your budget point? Then do it.

Anything we should have added here? Got any insights and tips for guys putting together hunts right now? In your opinion, what are the best turkey hunting states?

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