Image: eastern_8_nation

Photo by Bill Konway.

Traditionally, South Carolina has a deep turkey hunting tradition and good numbers of birds in the right habitat areas.Unfortunately, estimates of South Carolina's turkey population are down to 87,000 turkeys statewide. Numbers, officials say, have declined because of poor hatches during recent years. As spring harvest data goes, hunters took 12,428 birds in 2024, which marked about a 5% decrease from 2023.

As public property goes, if you're willing to hike a little, you can find seclusion in the state's 630,000 acres of wildlife management areas. Add to that another million acres of public hunting on U.S. Forest Service lands (600,000-plus acres between the Francis Marion and Sumter National forests), more than a quarter-million acres of DNR lands, plus state Forestry Commission lands as well as timber company properties open to public hunting.