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Hunting Tips - Strategic Calling

Strategic calling is a fundamental skill that significantly increases a hunter's success rate. It involves understanding the language of the game, mastering various calling techniques, and knowing when and how to deploy them effectively. This guide outlines key strategies for using calls to locate, attract, and ultimately harvest your target.

Understanding Game Vocalizations

Effective calling begins with knowledge of the animal's natural sounds. Each call has a purpose and is context-dependent.

Vocalization Type

Purpose

When to Use

Contact Calls

Locating other animals and signaling presence.

Searching for a nearby animal or indicating your presence to a distant one.

Pleading/Distress Calls

Mimicking a vulnerable or injured animal.

As a high-risk, high-reward method to attract predators or protective mature animals.

Territorial Calls

Challenging a dominant animal.

To draw in a mature animal that is defending its territory.

Mating/Breeding Calls

Attracting a mate.

During the animal's breeding season.

Mastering Calling Techniques

Consistent practice is key to sounding authentic. Use a variety of calls and techniques to simulate a natural scenario.

1. Directional Calling

Project your call away from your actual position to keep the animal focused on a perceived source of the sound, rather than you.

  • Strategy: Point the call barrel slightly away or behind you.
  • Benefit: This helps mask your exact location and encourages the animal to approach without pinpointing you.
2. Volume and Tone Control

Adjust the volume and tone of your call based on the weather, terrain, and distance of the animal.

  • Loud Calls: Use on windy days, in dense cover, or when initially trying to reach animals far away.
  • Soft Calls: Essential as the animal gets closer. Soft calls are crucial for the final few yards and can prevent spooking.
3. Calling Sequences and Rhythms

Animals listen for natural rhythms. Avoid monotonous or overly long calling.

  • Use Series: Mimic natural conversation, not just a single, isolated sound. For example, a series of short contact calls followed by a longer pause.
  • Vary Calls: Incorporate different calls (e.g., a hen cluck followed by a yelp for turkeys) to create a more realistic scenario.
Strategic Deployment

The environment and time of day significantly influence how you should call.

Terrain and Coverage

Scenario

Calling Adjustment

Recommended Call Type

Dense Woods

Call more frequently and loudly to penetrate cover.

Contact and pleading calls

Open Fields

Call softly and less frequently to avoid exposure.

Soft contact or mating calls

Windy Conditions

Increase call volume; focus on calls that carry well.

Loud, sharp calls

Timing the Call

Timing is crucial. Never call when the animal is looking directly at your position.

  1. Locate: Use a loud locator call (e.g., a crow or owl call) from a distance or while moving to prompt a response without alarming the target animal.
  2. Move In: Once you have a response, move to a strategic location, to set up.
  3. Engage: Begin your primary calling sequence, but stop calling just before the animal enters the final shooting zone.

Note: Stopping the call a short distance from your position creates the illusion that the "source" of the sound has moved or is waiting, which often prompts the animal to close the final distance. 

Grilled Bass
Selecting the Right Lure Type


Outdoorsmen