Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
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Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
It was the opening day of Turkey Season in Arizona and I was out in the hills with my friend Dale, looking to bag my first turkey. Dale had never hunted them or shot one before this either. We were both newbie turkey hunters.
Dale and I had scouted and looked for them. We read magazine articles about hunting turkeys ... there was no internet in those days. You had buy a printed book if you wanted to read about something. We also bought some turkey calls and tried to practice what we thought would sound right. The books gave us a few clues and we tried to follow them.
We had found the are where a flock was and where they went to roost at night. The books said one good way to start hunting turkeys was find where they roost. Then sneak in before day and bust 'em off the roost. The turkeys will scatter. As soon as it is light, start giving the lost turkey call and while it may not fool the older wiser birds, the young ones will run to you. They hate being alone!
Opening Day found us ... well before dawn ... sneaking up a wash and scaring the turkeys where they were roosting. Between Dale and I and the turkeys we made a lot of noise! Then we settled down, Dale watching one direction while I watched the other. We were in a small patch of brush, camo'd and quiet. When it got light enough to see the sights I started calling.
Dale had a Browning Auto 5 and I was hunting with my Ruger .45 Colt sixgun. Yes, it was legal for Turkeys. I had it loaded with the old Colt bullet by Lyman ... #454190 .. 255 gr. roundnose .. over 8.5 gr. Unique. I did not want to tear up the bird if I got a shot. I figured the heavy roundnose bullet would just "pencil" through.
I had been calling for a few minutes when all of sudden there was turkey running toward me! I stopped calling, picked up my pistol and cocked the hammer. I went to put the sights on the bird but something was wrong! I was shaking badly and could not hold the gun steady. I jerked the trigger and missed the bird. It just stood there staring at me and I cocked the hammer and fired again, shaking like leaf. The bullet hit the bird on the right leg and it suddenly took off, flying directly overhead. I pulled the gun up and snapped a shot that went directly into the bird's breast. It flew right into the hillside about 30 feet from us and crashed like a shot-down fighter in WW1.
I couldn't stop shaking! We got over to the bird and found it was dead. It turned out to be a young female, legal for this part of the Season.
I eventually settled down and we packed up and went home. I took the bird to a shop and had the meat smoked and we ate it for Thanksgiving dinner. My wife made a display from the tail which we had for years but somehow lost in one of the times we were moving.
I never did get out to hunt turkeys again. We moved to Missouri not too many years after that and I couldn't hunt turkeys in Missouri with a handgun, so I never went.
I also never experienced that rush of adrenaline that gives "buck fever" again either.
It was about 1985.
Dale and I had scouted and looked for them. We read magazine articles about hunting turkeys ... there was no internet in those days. You had buy a printed book if you wanted to read about something. We also bought some turkey calls and tried to practice what we thought would sound right. The books gave us a few clues and we tried to follow them.
We had found the are where a flock was and where they went to roost at night. The books said one good way to start hunting turkeys was find where they roost. Then sneak in before day and bust 'em off the roost. The turkeys will scatter. As soon as it is light, start giving the lost turkey call and while it may not fool the older wiser birds, the young ones will run to you. They hate being alone!
Opening Day found us ... well before dawn ... sneaking up a wash and scaring the turkeys where they were roosting. Between Dale and I and the turkeys we made a lot of noise! Then we settled down, Dale watching one direction while I watched the other. We were in a small patch of brush, camo'd and quiet. When it got light enough to see the sights I started calling.
Dale had a Browning Auto 5 and I was hunting with my Ruger .45 Colt sixgun. Yes, it was legal for Turkeys. I had it loaded with the old Colt bullet by Lyman ... #454190 .. 255 gr. roundnose .. over 8.5 gr. Unique. I did not want to tear up the bird if I got a shot. I figured the heavy roundnose bullet would just "pencil" through.
I had been calling for a few minutes when all of sudden there was turkey running toward me! I stopped calling, picked up my pistol and cocked the hammer. I went to put the sights on the bird but something was wrong! I was shaking badly and could not hold the gun steady. I jerked the trigger and missed the bird. It just stood there staring at me and I cocked the hammer and fired again, shaking like leaf. The bullet hit the bird on the right leg and it suddenly took off, flying directly overhead. I pulled the gun up and snapped a shot that went directly into the bird's breast. It flew right into the hillside about 30 feet from us and crashed like a shot-down fighter in WW1.
I couldn't stop shaking! We got over to the bird and found it was dead. It turned out to be a young female, legal for this part of the Season.
I eventually settled down and we packed up and went home. I took the bird to a shop and had the meat smoked and we ate it for Thanksgiving dinner. My wife made a display from the tail which we had for years but somehow lost in one of the times we were moving.
I never did get out to hunt turkeys again. We moved to Missouri not too many years after that and I couldn't hunt turkeys in Missouri with a handgun, so I never went.
I also never experienced that rush of adrenaline that gives "buck fever" again either.
It was about 1985.
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Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
Jim is there anything that you haven't hunted with a Sixgun

Whatever you do always give 100%........... unless you are donating blood.
Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
1985…….seems like last week. Nice looking bird Jim……and with a revolver…well done….…I never could seem to connect with one……..I made the wrong gun choice the few times I hunted turkey as the guys at camp all had shotguns and I was contemplating bringing a ‘92 in 32-20 but decided on a shotgun and what do I see….a perfectly silhouetted turkey on the crest of a ridge from 60 yards away.
You look lean and mean in that pic…..——006
You look lean and mean in that pic…..——006
This is Boring & Mindless……Wasted Energy
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Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
One I shot last year with a .45 Colt.
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Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
Nice work Scott!
Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
Yes .. but I never shot everything I hunted.gamekeeper wrote: ↑Wed Dec 27, 2023 1:02 pm Jim is there anything that you haven't hunted with a Sixgun![]()
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Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
Well ... I was Jack. That was a long time ago .. but I am getting back down there. I am now 180 pounds down from 265 and my waist is now 34" where it was over 40" ... feeling good. This was in November.
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Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
Wonderful, Jim! You look great! Losing that amount of weight re-opens all kinds of doors, lets you do things you may have not done for years.
BTW, I loved your turkey story.
BTW, I loved your turkey story.
Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
Been cutting and splitting firewood today. At 77 my cutting and splitting ain't as fast as it once was, but heck, nothing much else is either! Yeah, I get around better, have more energy, my back don't hurt anymore. I am grateful for the Lord being so kind to me. I certainly have not deserved it.
Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
Even at 77 you look like a Special Forces guy! I bet Scott wouldn’t even mess with you and by the way, nice turkey Scott. Something about a harvest with a revolver…..more accomplishing…..
You guys in Texas may have lots of humidity, tornados, and people sneaking up from the South, but you also have lots of fun….
You guys in Texas may have lots of humidity, tornados, and people sneaking up from the South, but you also have lots of fun….
This is Boring & Mindless……Wasted Energy
- Scott Tschirhart
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Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
I can’t imagine ever getting crossways with Jim. We know each other wayyy too well! I’m down over 30 pounds since this photo was taken.
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Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
We both have lost quite a bit since then.
I sure enjoyed visiting with you and your wife. We are gonna have to do it again! I will work it out to get down there when you have a bit of time off.
I sure enjoyed visiting with you and your wife. We are gonna have to do it again! I will work it out to get down there when you have a bit of time off.
Re: Hunting Turkeys With A Sixgun
Way to go, Scott! That's quite an accomplishment.....it ain't easy.
- Scott Tschirhart
- Advanced Levergunner
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- Joined: Fri Oct 16, 2020 2:56 pm
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