![]() The turkey putt is an alarm call similar to a deer snorting or an elk barking. If you’re hunting and you hear a turkey putting, it’s not good! This sound is prominently featured in the dreams of many veteran hunters. Known as fighting purrs, these louder, sharper noises denote aggression towards rival gobblers. Toms also make a similar sound when fighting other toms. ![]() The hope is that the wary gobbler will believe that everything is peachy when he hears the purrs. Hunters use purring calls to bring in a cautious tom. The sound is a soft sound that somewhat resembles someone trying to roll their r’s. In my video above, you can hear the hen purring in between clucks. As mentioned above, the hen will cluck and purr as she travels along or feeds. The purr is a soft sound that the hen uses when she is calm and content. It can be just the ticket for bringing in a fired-up gobbler, but it can also turn off a tom who is cautiously coming into a “hen” that has previously been soft calling. It is not a machine gun sequence of clucks like you might hear some beginning callers making.Īs you might imagine, cutting can have dramatic consequences when used in a hunting setting. When I call, I cut by doing varying series of one to three clucks. Listen to how the hen breaks up the cutting. Hens will also use cutting to show aggression towards other hens. It signals to the tom that the hen is ready to breed and he needs to come get her. Cutting is the most sexually aggressive of the hen turkey sounds. CuttingĬutting is a series of fast, loud clucks. The key is to learn the proper context and intensity to generate a quality cluck. To make things even more confusing, many callers will use the word “putt” to vocalize the cluck on a mouth call. The cluck is a softer sound than the putt. Needless to say, you do not want to putt when you are calling. As you will read below, the putt is a warning call signaling danger to other turkeys. In the video below, you can hear this hen clucking and purring. The cluck can be heard in conjunction with purrs when a turkey is milling about at peace with the world. Unlike the yelp, it is less uniform and more erratic. Like the yelp, the cluck is also commonly used in a series. Hens will cluck to signal contentment or to let other turkeys know where she is. The cluck is another prominent hen turkey sound. Notice how the tone is deeper than most hen calls. Yelping is not exclusive to the female turkey. “Yelp,” “chuck,” and “shock” are just a few of the words commonly used to humanize the turkey vocabulary. There are a variety of words hunters will use to imitate a yelp with a mouth call. Hens will also use a loud series of assembly yelps to gather her flock together. This is in sharp contrast to the excited yelp you will hear in the spring as a hens answer gobbling toms. As a hen wakes up, she will make very soft, content tree yelps. The emotion of a yelp can vary quite a bit. Hens will also emit single yelps as well. These strings are usually very uniform and rhythmic. While hens typically yelp in three to seven-note strings, as you can hear in the video, they can create much longer strings. Hens commonly yelp to let other turkeys know her location. The yelp is the most common of the hen turkey sounds you will hear. There is a video or link to a video of each sound so you can hear and see for yourself a real turkey calling. ![]() ![]() This article covers seven different types of hen turkey sounds. Learning to distinguish the different calls, what they mean, and when to use them will make you a much better hunter. There are a variety of hen turkey sounds that all mean different things. To the untrained ear, it may sound like turkeys are just doing a bunch of squawking. ![]()
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