Created to honor a great call maker, Tom Turpin, this call is derived from plans and description in his book "Hunting the Wild Turkey." Made from the wing bones of a turkey, this call also incorporates a brass shell.
$45.00
Made from the bones of a Hot Buffalo Wing, this call screeches a high pitch, imitating a young lost yen. It’s orange wrapping resembles the color of the hot sauce.
$20.00
This call can be easily adjusted to collapse down on itself for ease and care of carrying. Made of bamboo, cork and a wing bone, the move- able adjustable ends are inverted to carry in your shirt pocket for easy
transportation without fear of breaking the wing bone, as it is housed in the wide bamboo chamber. The call can be quickly reassembled for calling.
$25.00
Hard maple wood turned and stained makes for a beautiful call. Complete with a memory mouth piece and lanyard.
$40.00
The round pot call is a regular in the hunters arsenal of calls. A must, a pot call can create all types of calls, including whines,
clucks, keke, keke runs, chirps, cuts, purrs and yelps.
this call is made from sycamore and slate
$45.00
When turtles purr like cats, turkeys will walk to the end of
your barrel, and that is practically what they do when this death dealer is taken out to the woods. The Purring Turtle can create an assortment of calls. The Purring Turtle call is made from a turtle shell and piece of slate.
$65.00
This is simply a smaller version of palm box. Worked like a box call with a paddle, the small palm box can create a variety of sounds. Because of its small size it can easily be carried.
$25.00
Indians created wing bone calls nearly 10,000 years ago, so I suppose that a native picked up an oyster shell and rubbed it with an oak stick producing turkey sounds. Attached to a pot, the sound is accentuated and carries. Used as a friction call with a striker, the caller can cover one or both ends of the pot with their fingers and it will produce different tones.
$35.00
I originally spotted a variation of this call in the parking lot of a Dead Show in Charlotte in the Spring of ‘94 in which some drug crazed hippie was running around hooting on a shell. Since then, I have straightened up and perfected the call.
This call is made from a Muffin Snail Sea Shell. When properly worked, it sounds like a Hoot Owl
I originally spotted a variation of this call in the parking lot of a Dead Show in Charlotte in the Spring of ‘94 in which some drug crazed hippie was running around hooting on a shell. Since then, I have straightened up and perfected the call.
This call is made from a Muffin Snail Sea Shell. When properly worked, it sounds like a Hoot Owl in the early morning before dawns first light and will surely evoke a gobble from a roosting bird
$30.00
Aunt Sadie, God Bless her passed on soul, told me, that back in the day, before air conditioning ruined the South, that the church members would bring Turkey Feather Fans to cool themselves when the preacher wouldn’t quit preaching on a hot Sunday morning….a hot Sunday morning that inevitably turned into an even hotter Sunday afternoon.
Th
Aunt Sadie, God Bless her passed on soul, told me, that back in the day, before air conditioning ruined the South, that the church members would bring Turkey Feather Fans to cool themselves when the preacher wouldn’t quit preaching on a hot Sunday morning….a hot Sunday morning that inevitably turned into an even hotter Sunday afternoon.
The wing feather fan is one of the most deadly tactics in a hunters bag of tricks. It’s usage is many and varied: mimic a turkeys descent from the roost, replicate the sound of a bird beating it’s wing against it’s body, giving it self a dust bath or simply fanning itself. The wing feather fan sounds like the real thing (well…..because it is the real thing) and will bring in the Toms, neck outstretched, gobbling, looking for early morning love.
$65.00