A hunting blind can provide comfort and improve your chances of bagging a turkey. Some, however, still prefer the thrill of being in the wide open.
Hunkered in a small, tent-like hunting blind, I watched with frustration as a big tom turkey strutted and gobbled all morning in a distant field, then strode past, well out of shotgun range, chasing two hens.
He ignored my plaintive calls and two decoys. After five days of turkey hunting in three states, it looked as if the results in Minnesota would be the same: No bird.
Nibbling on a breakfast bar, I waited. Forty minutes later, seeing nothing, I turned and peeked out the screened opening behind me, just in case that gobbler had changed his mind.
And there he was, his copper feathers glistening in the sunshine, silently and slowly ambling my way.
My heart pounded as I collapsed my chair, cleared away my gear and quietly pivoted 180 degrees. The gaudy bird strode closer, and at 27 yards fell to one well-placed shot.
Soon, wild turkey would be roasting in my oven.
My success last May underscored the benefit of using a blind to hunt wild turkeys: Without it, I almost certainly wouldn't have bagged that bird. It concealed my movement, allowing me to turn around and get a shot. I couldn't have done that nestled against a tree.