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NEWS
April 13, 2007
Bearded Wonder
Decision awaits on question of
a world mark
An eastern wild
turkey shot by Cody May of New Boston on April 6 may
have set the world record for beard length.
But part of the
22.5-inch beard broke off before a second set of
measurements were taken, which may bring the record into
question.
May, a real estate
appraiser, has hunted turkey for two years near his
home, and shot his first bird last year. "On
Friday morning, the cold front had just hit," he said.
"I heard them gobbling on the roost, and set up in the
closest wheat field with one hen decoy."
Things happen
quickly. "The tom flew off the roost straight to
the field, and came straight to the decoy and started
strutting," he said. "I shot him at about 25 yards
with my 12-gauge."
My said he knew the
bird was a good tom, but didn't see the beard. "It
all happened so fast, I was kind of befuzzled."
After he saw the
beard, he knew it was something special. After
making a few calls, he took the bird to Savage Deer
Processing in Hooks, an official Texas Parks and
Wildlife check station (hunters harvesting eastern wild
turkeys in Texas must check them in at an approved
station).
Owner Tina Savage
measured the bird. "It's the biggest turkey I've
ever seen," she said. "It weighed 20 pounds, the
left spur was 1.5 inches and the right was 1.25 inches."
The beard measured 22.5 inches.
Savage Deer
Processing has been a check station :for as long as they
have had the program," she said. "There's been a
lot of excitement here since the bird was brought in."
Determining whether
the bird's beard is a world, or even a state record is
difficult. "TPW does not keep records for that
species," said Penny Pettit, regulatory wildlife
biologist for the Piney Woods District. "Your best
bet is to go to the National Wild Turkey Federation.
They keep better records."
NWTF keeps records
for typical and atypical (more than one beard) eastern
turkeys.
Birds are scored by
adding measurements of the both spurs and multiplying
the combined length by 10. The beard length is
measured and multiplied by two. The spur and beard
points are added to the total weight for the bird's
score.
According to NWTF's
Web site, Alex Low has the current state record for a
typical Eastern, which scored 80.75, and its beard was
11.875 inches. The nation's longest beard of
18.125 inches was taken in 1998 by Robert Tremblay of
King George, Virginia, according to NWTF.
In Texas, the
longest beard registered on an eastern in 13.5 inches,
shot by Michael Storey near Jefferson.
Karen Cavender is
the Wild Turkey Records Coordinator for NWTF. "The
Web site stays current on the rankings of the birds,"
she said.
Mays' bird had an
unofficial score of 92.5, which would make it a state
record typical eastern. The nation's best eastern
typical scored 104.8125, taken in 1999 by James Lewis in
Franklin, Kent.
After leaving
Savage Deer Processing, the bird was viewed by Johnny
Thomas, an ex-game warden. That afternoon, they
took the bird to Mount Pleasant where it was measured
again. but, the thing protruding strands of the
beard had broken off, and the beard measured 17.5
inches. "The beard was awful brittle," May said.
Cavender said
the record is still attainable. "If the bird was
measured, the measurements were recorded at the checking
station, and if the hunter has pictures of the beard,
the hunter can provide the picture with an affidavit
from the checking station," she said. "Then, that
would be legitimate."
Does May think
he'll get the record? "It's up in the air," he
said, although he wished he wouldn't have driven 70
miles per hour with the bird in the back of his pickup.
"We're just kind of waiting right now."
Article
courtesy of Craig Nyhus of Lonestar Outdoor News
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