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Tractor Talk Discussion Forum

Wild turkeys - manure for breakfast

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jdemaris

03-11-2007 07:59:24




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Wild turkeys picking through some freshly-spread manure on the snow this morning. This time of year - they follow the tractor and manure spreader twice a day - and pick whatever grain can be found in the cow-manure. Couple of more months and they'll be picking for grasshoppers instead. Commonplace here in New York - but someone who lives in "non-turkey" areas might find it interesting. I get a kick out of seeing them fly.

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Gene Davis (GA)

03-11-2007 18:34:57




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 Re: Wild turkeys - manure for breakfast in reply to jdemaris, 03-11-2007 07:59:24  
Nice pictures. Wish the turkeys I work with could fly away like that!!



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1936

03-11-2007 17:00:28




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 Re: Wild turkeys - manure for breakfast in reply to jdemaris, 03-11-2007 07:59:24  
200 plus turkeys feeding at once on a single field south of house all winter. East of the house a year ago late season had
a 100 deer in one drive counted. Dnr charges 30 dollars per tag? Should give the tags out. End up with deer wasting like WI and Nothern IL. Caused by feeding/baiting deer in WI. Population pressure due feeding caused the start of a big problem. Similar to mad cow.

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dwrk

03-11-2007 09:54:59




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 Re: Wild turkeys - manure for breakfast in reply to jdemaris, 03-11-2007 07:59:24  
When the idiots reintroduced them here in the 70s, they were too cheap to get 100% wild turkeys so they got a few toms and crossed them with domestic turkeys and released them. They bred like crazy but they're still partly domesticated so they spend most of their time hanging around the barns, flocking, etc. After that the MNR decided to go 100% wild in restocking other areas but we're still stuck with these ones, apparently 3-400 turkeys in a flock in a barnyard isn't normal behaviour anywhere but here.
Some of the guys feeding outside are having a heck of a time with coccidiosis because of it, even with decox.

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rrlund

03-11-2007 09:45:01




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 Re: Wild turkeys - manure for breakfast in reply to jdemaris, 03-11-2007 07:59:24  
Those miserable things are thicher than hair on a dog back where I've been spreading. I was hauling Thursday and there was a possum lunching on the goodies that passed through the cows too.



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Mike (WA)

03-11-2007 09:05:14




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 Re: Wild turkeys - manure for breakfast in reply to jdemaris, 03-11-2007 07:59:24  
They re-introduced wild turkeys in Washington a few years back- flourishing in eastern, also doing OK in western, although probably a little too wet for them here some years. Had a hen hanging around our place for awhile last summer, probably ended up coyote bait.



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Walt Davies

03-11-2007 08:30:21




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 Re: Wild turkeys - manure for breakfast in reply to jdemaris, 03-11-2007 07:59:24  
We tried them out here in Oregon but the coyote eat them faster than than they can hatch.
Walt



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kwahl1

03-11-2007 08:37:18




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 Re: Wild turkeys - manure for breakfast in reply to Walt Davies, 03-11-2007 08:30:21  
yummy



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IaGary

03-11-2007 08:05:06




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 Re: Wild turkeys - manure for breakfast in reply to jdemaris, 03-11-2007 07:59:24  
The Ia DNR reintroduced the turkeys here about 30 years ago.

And now they are everywhere in Iowa.

They are causeing major crop damage in some areas. Even more damage then the deer do.

Think they will have to relaxe hunting seasons and get them under control.

There are to many.

Gary



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jdemaris

03-11-2007 08:45:01




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 Re: Wild turkeys - manure for breakfast in reply to IaGary, 03-11-2007 08:05:06  
Yeah - we have too many here also. When I moved here in the 70s, a wild turkey was a rare sight. Now, they are all over. The environmental department has been live-capturing our local birds with nets and trucking them up to Québec, Canada. Hope they can gobble in French. I can shoot the turkeys just about whenever I want. The conservation department gives me permits and tags when I complain about crop-damage. Same goes for deer. Permits can be used anytime EXCEPT when hunting season is open.

But, the reality is - I don't shoot the deer or turkeys anymore.
A few years ago - mid-summer - I shot three turkeys with one shot - when they were in my sweet corn. Come to find out they were in there chasing grasshoppers and I felt kind of bad.

Then one summer I saw the rearend of a deer in the middle of our sweet-corn close to our house. So, I walked out there with my 30.06 - had my little daughter with me. Got pretty close - and found a doe with twin fawns nibbling a few ears. And, nearby another doe with one fawn - doing the same. I didn't shoot - maybe I'll blame that on my daughter being with me. But - I've gotten so I enjoy most of the local animals alive better than dead.

I've found that the crop-damage is not too bad - except for springtime. The turkeys love to pull up young corn completely out of the ground - and they take the seed-pod and leave the rest.

I have a lot more trouble with racoons than anything else. A Deere will nibble an ear of corn and at least come close to finishing it. The turkey can make more of a mess especially when they make "crop circles" taking dirt-baths in the middle of a field.

But, the coons? They roam around - tear down 20 ears of corn for every one bite they take. They act as if they really enjoy destroying the crops - more than eating them. We've also had trouble with our "sitting hens." Every single time we've gotten a chicken that actually has some instict left and goes off and makes her own nest and sits - she gets killed by a racoon or a red fox.

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