Dr. Fell with his gobbler
If I write a second book about turkey hunting, one of the stories would be about the spring that I took Dr. David Fell on a hunt in Texas County, in the heart of the Ozarks. Dr. Fell was a client from Oklahoma, an ophthalmological surgeon well known in the Midwest.
He read an article I had written for Field and Stream magazine about hunting wild gobblers and from that he knew I was guiding turkey hunters. So he set up two days with me in which we would hunt turkeys the first half of the day and then float-fish the Piney River in the afternoon.
Dawn found us that first morning on a farm I had permission to hunt, and we were only about 200 yards from a gobbler that sounded off on the roost. A few seconds later a second tom gobbled... I heard them fly down off the roost and move toward us. About that time I heard another hunter calling to the gobblers. We were south of the turkeys and he was to the northeast. He called too much and too loud, so I knew it wasn’t a hen. That was kind of exasperating because the landowner had assured me no one else would be hunting the land.
Within the next hour the second gobbler completely shut up but the main one, seeming to stay where he was and gobbling quite often. The other hunter kept at it; not very good at imitating a hen, but sometimes you don’t have to be. My uncle Norten claimed he once called one up by pulling a rusty farm gate back and forth!
I am supposing that one gobbler kept expecting a hen to come to him but to our good fortune none came or they departed after mating. He got quiet for about thirty minutes and then started up again. He sounded off about 30 yards or so closer. Dr. Fell was well hidden with a tree behind him and some multiflora rose between him and the tom turkey that was beginning to act as if he indeed thought my call was a beautiful young hen that couldn’t wait to meet him.
About then off to my left I heard the unmistakable sound of a gobbler strutting, with that spitting and drumming sound they make. I looked over and saw him moving around behind me only a few yards away. Obviously he was the second gobbler we had heard that morning on the roost, but he hadn’t sounded off since.
He was a nice tom but Dr. Fell, who was several yards in front of me, couldn’t see him. In a matter of five or ten minutes the gobbler moved around behind me and out of sight into the woodlands. It took another hour but the tom turkey before us moved into sight about 60 yards away. It was Dr. Fells first turkey hunt and I could see him react. He began to shake with excitement and I hoped he knew the big bird was still well out of range. He did well to wait and when the gobbler was strutting about 35 yards before us I gave a soft call and he straightened high to look. At that moment the shotgun’s roar echoed across the valley and my turkey-hunting client collected his first gobbler. But the story didn’t end there.
Dr Fell had already paid me for two days on the river as well as that turkey hunt but he was so excited about his big 22-pound gobbler with an 11-inch beard that he wanted to get it back to Oklahoma to show some of his friends before he cleaned it. He told me to keep the money and he would come back some other time to float the river, and off he went.
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| Dr. Fell and me with his trophy gobbler |
But while we were taking pictures the other hunter showed up. He was a timid and apologetic local farm boy about 14 years old, maybe younger. He looked at that big gobbler with envious eyes and said he hoped to get one like that sometime before the season ended. Two days later he did, and I was there! I called up that gobbler too, for the youngster… a few hundred yards from where Dr. Fell bagged his first turkey. The boy was about as excited as I was when I killed my first one. I wrote a magazine article in later years about both turkeys.
I got paid for one and the other one I just did for another kind of reward, one that didn’t involve pay. It was an act that made me as happy as anything I have done as a turkey guide. Maybe the greatest part of that season long ago involved that second gobbler and a poor farm kid that didn’t even own a camouflaged shirt.
You can see a photo of Dr. Fell and his gobbler on my website… larrydablemontoutdoors.com.


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