My first turkey.
This took place almost twenty years ago now. I drove up to the mountains with 3 other guys.
It was the first day of spring turkey season. I knew this because we were late. We were always late the first day of spring turkey. You see, in this state, the state motor vehicle department had taken the decision to have all car registrations expire on the same day of the year. This lead to endless lines, bad tempers, etc. Truck all registrations expired the next month on the same day as the start of the turkey season. My friend was not someone to put off things until the last minute, he always sent in his paperwork it on time to get his new registration, the trouble was that he didn't remember to put on the stickers. Until, that is, we were always half way to the mountains in the wee hours of the morning. Then he would turn around, get the stickers, put them on, and we would start back to the mountains with considerably more illumination.
This happened year after year until the motor vehicle department, in it's infinite wisdom, decided that staggering everyone's expiration date would be an exciting change of pace.
This particular year we arrived and were walking in with the sun well above the ridgeline as usual. I was bringing up the rear because I was unusually slow for my age even then. I was thinking that I would probably end up blundering into someone who'd been setup a hour before dawn and wouldn't be too happy to see me come crashing through the woods.
About this time I saw a red fox go off on a trail which broke off of the one we were on. I signalled to the rest of my group that I was going after the fox and started following it up a hill. I didn't think I had a prayer of tracking it and kept going until the trail came to a large flat area that had been clear-cut some time in the past. With no sign of the fox, I stopped to answer the call of nature. While I was in mid-stream, so to speak, I looked over to the edge of the clear-cut where it met some woods and watched a gobbler stroll. I did a double take.
I quickly reached the decision that I should immediately raise my shotgun and leave my other business unfinished for the moment. I aimed and shot. The gobbler's head seemed to flail and it rolled away from me and out of sight.
I ran after it, while simultaneosly zipping up with my free hand. I came to the edge of the clear-cut and found that the woods were on a slope. The gobbler was no where in sight. I made a few zig-zags and but didn't find anything. Several minutes had past and my friends showed up. They thought I had shot the fox. I explained that I shot a turkey and they joined in the search.
After 20 minutes or so, there was still no sign of it and these guys were beginning to doubt I'd hit it at all. My friend who was driving mentioned something about "that guy and his son". I said, "What guy and his son". My friend said that there was someone hunting with their son on the edge of the clear-cut when they came up after hearing the shot. I was beginning to wonder if they had claimed my turkey.
My buddies were about to give up helping me look. I told them, "I'm going to keep on looking until I find it because I know it's on this mountain".
I finally expanded my search to about 25 yards from where I shot it and found the gobbler lying dead about 45 degrees from where it figured it would have gone if it rolled straight downhill.
I obviously broke it's neck and it ran around a little afterwards. Either that or it had help getting to it's final resting place. I'm not sure.