TOPEKA, KANSAS
The big gobbler stepped from woods to pasture, followed by three more long-bearded toms and a bunch of hens — a virtual herd of turkeys.
All ambled toward Tom Kalahar, nestled on the ground, wide-eyed at his good fortune. After hunting 23 hours during the first two days of a four-day Kansas turkey hunt, he hadn't fired a shot.
Until now.
"They came right down the edge of the woods toward me,'' said Kalahar, of Olivia, Minn. When the first gobbler was at 40 yards, he fired his 12 gauge once, dropping the bird.
"Then I jumped up and shot another one at 50 yards,'' he said.
And just like that he filled his two-bird Kansas bag limit. "That's as sweet as it gets,'' he said.
For many die-hard Minnesota turkey hunters, gobbler fever leads to long drives to distant states. Hunting for a few days during Minnesota's spring turkey season just isn't enough.