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Post by Decatur on Jan 23, 2009 12:20:41 GMT -5
Indiana hunters killed 610 wild turkeys during the 2008 fall wild turkey hunting season. Wild turkeys were killed in 57 of the 74 counties open to turkey hunting during the season, which ran from Oct. 1 to 19.
The 2008 season was Indiana's fourth modern-day fall turkey hunting season. Hunters experienced a 4 percent increase in success when compared to the 585 turkeys taken during the 2007 fall turkey season. The record is 716 turkeys in 2005.
During the 14-day archery-only season, Oct. 1 to 14, hunters killed 132 turkeys, accounting for 22 percent of the total. The majority of the fall harvest occurred during the combined shotgun and archery season, Oct. 15 to 19, when hunters killed 478 turkeys, accounting for 78 percent of the total fall harvest.
Adult male turkeys accounted for 74.5 percent of the harvest, with the remaining 25.5 percent consisting of juvenile birds. The juvenile-to-adult ratio was 1 to 3. According to DNR biologist Steve Backs, the high adult proportion was probably related to a combination of hunter selectivity and below-average brood production in 2008.
Harrison County topped the hunter success list with 40 turkeys, followed by Switzerland (36), and Pike (31).
Media Contact: Phil Bloom, director of communications, (317) 232-4003, cell (317) 502-1683
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Post by Woody Williams on Jan 23, 2009 13:24:14 GMT -5
Thanks for posting Decatur.
Very interesting.
I'd still like to see turkeys legal for all of early archery season in select counties.
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Post by danf on Jan 23, 2009 14:10:34 GMT -5
I don't know why, but when I saw the partial thread title ("Indiana hunters killed") from the main page I was thinking "Oh, great, somebody got shot mistakenly".... Then I saw the rest of the title and though "Oh, it's a poaching story". Glad I was wrong on both accounts!
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