Voices of Prois...Tracks and Tales
By: Prois Staffer, Julie Walker My first year of Spring turkey hunting was enlightening. Spring turkey hunting occurs as Mother Nature reawakens. She teaches us there is a time and...
Voices of Prois... Solo New Mexico Merriam Hunt
By: Prois Staffer, Emmy Garnish
Solo New Mexico Merriam hunt in the Gila National Forest. Simplyecstatic about this bird. My first successful solo turkey hunt too!Multiple days scouting, then three days hunting well before dawn andpast shooting light, I learned behavioral traits of these Gila birds andrhythms of the land. I found multigenerational roosts in toweringponderosa pines on steep mesa hill sides, was passed by chirping andplayful elk herds, stared at by wide-eared mule deer, barked at bypuffed-up smelly javelina, even growled at by a confused coyote. Igathered surprise morels around fallen ancient burled cottonwoods nearslow-flowing creek beds. I sat in the shade leaning against alligatorjunipers in the dry and dusty mid day heat calling, only to have thesilence broken by ravens and woodpeckers in the wind and swayingbranches. I heard heavy gobbles on the roost and then distant, sporadiccalls throughout the days.Turkey hunting is such a test of patience. You withstand below freezingtemps sitting still in mornings, get humbled over and over, and spendhours listening, waiting, resetting and questioning everything. Butsitting alone while the wild world moves around you is something bothsacred and transcendent. A robin landed on my gun barrel one morning,and another day I locked eyes with a falcon flying straight toward mebefore it veered away at the last second.Turkey hunting also forces you to sit still long enough to hear yourinner monologue and realize you're just a grown adult sitting in thedirt imitating a female bird and playing hide and seek with mini,feathered t-rex decendents. It's humbling to have your self-worth hingeon the whim of an animal that has a brain the size of a small walnut.Finally, on the fourth morning, after days of trial and error, I startedto put together a few patterns. Decoys set, sitting and hidden in my newspot I realize I did not have the striker for my slate call, I only havemy mouth call—which I was not nearly as confident with. I immediatelyhear a hen close by. I pressed my gun to my shoulder, steadied it on myshooting stick and started softly and carefully calling back. She seemedinterested for a while but then there was silence. Doubt set in.Then movement in the corner of my eye. Out of nowhere and in completesilence, a dominant tom and his hens materialized like ghosts, feedingand drifting toward my decoys. I eased the safety off. As he closed thedistance, the world narrowed down to the bead on my barrel. My heartpounding, adrenaline surging with every step he took. He stepped intothe clearing, perfectly in range—BOOM!!!Everything flushed except that big ol’ tom on the ground.Fresh turkey and morel mushrooms for dinner! I recounted the moments toexcited family and friends and that makes the whole experience evensweeter. Theres a lot more to a hunt than a successful harvest. I amgrateful for the land, the learning and the people in my life.I hadn’t really planned on hunting and had never hunted turkey in NMbefore, so there was last-minute practice with borrowed and recentlypurchased gear. Even though I was hunting alone, there were so manypeople behind this hunt: a borrowed 12 gauge with a front bead sight, anold tent-pole shooting stick I customized with electrical tape, twocases of Federal 2 3/4 5 shot shells with faded $6.99 price tags, arugged GMC manual pickup with the spirit of an adventurous woman, andyears of knowledge from hunting with my brothers and father. I purchaseda few calls and decoys on a rushed late night run from a limitedselection—stores are hours away…Cheers to all who made it to the end and have a passion for ourbeautiful world, hunting, harvesting and sharing it all!
Voices of Prois... Three Toms
By: Prois Staffer, Ro Snebbold Three Toms, Zero Dignity The alarm goes off at 5 a.m., which honestly feels illegal for a Saturday. But it’s turkey season, so we accept...
Take It From A Female Hunter- Prois Staffer, Maggie Boineau
The biggest communication problem is that we do not listen to understand. We listen to reply. – Stephen R. Covey Have you ever noticed that turkey hunters always talk about the gobblers...
Turkey Alert!
Prois Fan, Jessica Whitaker took advantage of a spring snow and punched her Colorado turkey tag! Congratulations!!
#iamprois #womenwhohunt #huntinglife #turkeyhunting
New Jersey Bird DOWN!
TURKEY ALERT! Prois Staffer & NJ Coordinator, Cristina McGannon Jones kicks into NJ turkey opener with a BANG! Congratulations!!#iamprois #womenwhohunt #turkeyhunting
Can't Stop The Flop...Prois Style!
TURKEY ALERT!
Prois Staffer, Korin Carpenter notched her Nevada turkey tag. Congratulations!!
#iamprois #womenwhohunt #huntinglife
Traditions Tuesday!
What a proud parent moment for Prois Staffer & Idaho State Coordinator, Aby Rinella! Her daughter went afield with her brother and bagged a bird! Huge congratulations to this sibling...
World Slam...And Prois Was There!
Drumroll please! Prois Fan, Amy Lowery completes her turkey world slam in Carlos Cano Cruz, Campeche Mexico. Congratulations!!
#iamprois #turkeyhunting #womenwhohunt #huntinglife













