Free: Contests & Raffles.
I hope the OP realizes all this talk about what sub species has absolutely nothing to do with my view of how great a bird he harvested. That is one great bird and an equally awesome story of persistence and hard work. At least for me I was just curious on how those Merriam genes got in that area. I've never seen a bird like that in Thurston Co. To me that means an even more rare and exciting bird
Quote from: Jonathan_S on April 21, 2015, 01:29:33 PMThere is a smoke-phase Tom running around my neck of the woods according to my neighbor. I told him not to shoot my Blue-Slate tom We had a local Winco selling Narragansett chicks last year. They are sure a cool looking bird. I've seen them smoke-phase until they go into strut and then they turned black, grey and white. Really neat how drastic the change was. Years ago Oregon had a few southern ranches that gave you the opportunity to shoot some of the exotic turkey species. I never did one of those, but had friends that did and said they were super hunter wise. Guess hunting pressure almost year round can make them pretty smart...for a dumb bird I'm thinking ODFW put a halt to that recently.
There is a smoke-phase Tom running around my neck of the woods according to my neighbor. I told him not to shoot my Blue-Slate tom
I'm hearing reports of others who have killed Merriam looking birds in areas of Thurston county. Maybe these are feral birds?