IN THE BLACK HILLS - The gobbler appeared in an instant, just over my shoulder, 20 yards away.
I was scouting for birds, 15 minutes into a four-day wild turkey hunt in the Black Hills, and had mimicked the call of a hen. A real hen chirped back.
I barely had time to slip on a camouflage face mask and sit against a tree when two hens and the tom emerged from the woods. The tom, sporting about a 5-inch beard, strolled into the open, presenting an easy, point-blank shot.
My heart pounded.
You'd think a guy who had sat in a turkey blind for 14 hours over two days last month on the Minnesota youth turkey hunt and never saw a bird -- hen, jake or tom -- would seize the opportunity.
You'd think a guy who never got a shot during his last Black Hills hunt would relish a tom with a 5-inch beard.
And you'd think a guy who knows that two-thirds of Minnesota's turkey hunters fail to bag a bird each spring would slowly raise his 12-gauge and squeeze the trigger.
You'd be wrong.