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The Wild Turkey and Its Hunting

Chapter 6 SOCIAL RELATIONS-NESTING-THE YOUNG BIRDS

Word Count: 1535    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

or companion, or pair off in the spring, as do most gallinaceous birds. Charles Hallock has stated that turkeys

though it costs him his life. He is a gay Lothario and will covet and steal his neighbors' wives and daughters; and if his neighbors protest, will fight to the finish. He is artful, cunning, and sly, at the same time a stupendous fool. One day no art can persuade him to approach you, no matter how persuasively or persistently you call; the next day he will walk boldly up to the gun at the first call and be shot. He has no sentiment beyond a dudish and

ck brush on top of

bly, then a few dry leaves are scratched in to line the excavation. Again, the nest may be under an old fallen treetop or tussock of tall grass, or beside an old log, against which sundry brush, leaves, and grass have drifted, or in an open stubble field or prairie. There is o

omesticated turkey, showing considerable variation in size and shape. In color they are uniform cream, sometimes yellowi

as the yearling, but the little fellow in down bears a striking resemblance to a young ostrich. The deciduous feathers mature quickly, and the quill-ends dry before the young bird is a quarter grown; hence the feathers grow no more. But the bird grows until molting-time arrives, when the young fowl, if a gobbler, will weigh from seven to nine pounds. The molting season comes on apace, and the bird is out of humor; for its clothes, as it were, do not fit, the mosquitoes and ticks bite it, and the deciduous quills of the wings begin to get loose and drop out, one at a time at long intervals, so that some feathers are growing while others are falling. This is also true of the body covering. The tail becomes snagg

n slowly until eleven or twelve inches long, when it seems to stop. It may be owing to its wearing off at the lower end by dragging on the ground while feeding; but a close inspection will not substantiate this, for the hairs at the extreme end of the beard are blunt and rounding, and do not ind

ount of the extreme shyness of the mother

turkey hen on the banks of the Trinity River, in Texas, which was covered with precisely the same bronze feathers that distinguish the gobbler-the same thick, velvety black satin breast, and the same beautifully decorated neck and head, except the white turban cap of the gobbler. She had a five-inch beard and looked in

Turkeys have a habit of rolling themselves in dust and ashes to remove vermin from the skin and feathers; but I believe a bath o

but usually the entire brood remains under her guidance more or less until December or January. At this time the young males begin to follow the ways of the old gobbler, separating from the females and going in bands by themselves; therefore there are at this time three classes

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The Wild Turkey and Its Hunting
The Wild Turkey and Its Hunting
“This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1914 edition. Excerpt: ... CHAPTER IV THE TURKEY HISTORIC HAVING disposed of such records as we have of the extinct ancestors of the American turkeys -- the so-to-speak meleagrine records -- we can now pass to what is, comparatively speaking, the modern history of these famous birds, although some of this history is already several centuries old. We have seen in the foregoing chapter that all the described fossil species of turkeys have been restricted to the genus Meleagris, and this is likewise the case with the existing species and subspecies. Right here I may say that the word Meleagris is Greek as well as Latin, and means a guinea-fowl. This is due to the fact that when turkeys were first described and written about they were, by several authors of the early times, strangely mixed up with those African forms, and the two were not entirely disentangled for some time, as we shall see further on in this chapter. In modern ornithology, however, the generic name of Meleagris has been transferred from the guinea-fowls to the turkeys. These last, as they are classified in "The A. O. U. Check-List of the American Ornithologists' Union," which is the latest authoritative word upon the subject, stand as follows: Family Meleagrid DEGREESe. Turkeys. Genus Meleagris Linnaeus. Meleagris Linnaeus, Syst. Nat., ed. 10, 1, 1758, 156. Type, by subs, desig., Meleagris gallopavo Linnaeus (Gray, 1840). Meleagris gallopavo (Linnaeus). Range.-- Eastern and south central United States, west to Arizona and south to the mountains of Oaxaca. a. [Meleagris gallopavo gallopavo. Extralimital.] b. Meleagris gallopavo silvestris Vieillot. Wild Turkey [310a]. Meleagris silvestris Vieillot Nouv., Diet. d'Hist. Nat., IX, 1817,447. Range. -- Eastern United States from Nebraska, Kansas, western...”
1 Chapter 1 MY EARLY TRAINING WITH THE TURKEYS2 Chapter 2 RANGE, VARIATION, AND NAME3 Chapter 3 THE TURKEY PREHISTORIC4 Chapter 4 THE TURKEY HISTORIC5 Chapter 5 BREAST SPONGE-SHREWDNESS6 Chapter 6 SOCIAL RELATIONS-NESTING-THE YOUNG BIRDS7 Chapter 7 ASSOCIATION OF SEXES8 Chapter 8 ITS ENEMIES AND FOOD9 Chapter 9 HABITS OF ASSOCIATION AND ROOSTING10 Chapter 10 GUNS I HAVE USED ON TURKEYS11 Chapter 11 LEARNING TURKEY LANGUAGE-WHY DOES THE GOBBLER GOBBLE12 Chapter 12 ON CALLERS AND CALLING13 Chapter 13 CALLING UP THE LOVELORN GOBBLER14 Chapter 14 THE INDIFFERENT YOUNG GOBBLER15 Chapter 15 HUNTING TURKEY WITH A DOG16 Chapter 16 THE SECRET OF COOKING THE TURKEY17 Chapter 17 CAMERA HUNTING FOR TURKEYS