Showing posts with label turkey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label turkey. Show all posts

Saturday, October 25, 2025

Franklin Rod and Gun Club schedules Annual Turkey Shoot - Saturday, Nov 22, 2025

Franklin Rod and Gun Club schedules Annual Turkey Shoot - Saturday, Nov 22, 2025
Franklin Rod and Gun Club schedules
Annual Turkey Shoot - Saturday, Nov 22, 2025
We love it. You love it. Everyone waits for it all year long.
Our annual Turkey Shoot is back on Nov. 22!
A $1 donation gets you free admission at which point you can buy as many tickets as you want and enter raffles to win 10 turkeys! There will also be two door prizes consisting of turkeys and baskets with all the fixins' and when we say ALL the fixins' we mean people with small cars will struggle to fit these suckers inside!
There's also free pizza and hotdogs, snacks, and cider (with a cash bar for the 21+ crowd). Kids can also participate in an air rifle competition in our downstairs range for $1 per attempt, with the winners also getting turkeys.
Honestly, even if you don't win you're gonna have a lot of fun. So come join us on Nov. 22 at 6 pm when the cash bar opens, and stay for the raffles starting at 7 pm.
Open to the public and tickets available at the door!



Thursday, March 13, 2025

Boston Globe: "Turkey mating season has begun. Consider yourself warned."

"An aggressive wild turkey chased a parking enforcement officer in Brookline into a building on Wednesday, and police warned residents to be on the lookout as the turkey mating season gets underway.

Police in Brookline, where wild turkeys are known for their boldness, said several aggressive ones were seen along Babcock Street about 8:30 a.m.

“One such report stated a turkey chased a parking enforcement officer into a building and then began pecking on the glass door!” police wrote on social media.

An animal control officer came to help the parking officer, police said.

Breeding season for wild turkeys, which MassWildlife describes as a “strikingly handsome bird,” typically lasts from March into May."
Continue reading the article online -> 
https://www.bostonglobe.com/2025/03/12/metro/brookline-police-warn-of-aggressive-turkeys/?

How to access the Globe via the Library with your library card

part of the flock of turkeys in the front yard in Dec 2024
part of the flock of turkeys in the front yard in Dec 2024

Thursday, August 20, 2020

Help out with #MassWildlife's Annual Turkey Brood Survey

MA Fish & Game (@MassDFG) tweeted at 9:02 AM on Wed, Aug 19, 2020:
Help out with #MassWildlife's Annual Turkey Brood Survey by reporting sightings of hens, poults (young turkeys), and males (both juvenile and adult) now through August 31.   https://t.co/clV0SJFCNO https://t.co/F2BNbaxxYq


Or go directly to the MA Fish and Game page https://www.mass.gov/news/report-wild-turkey-sightings

Help out with #MassWildlife's Annual Turkey Brood Survey
Help out with #MassWildlife's Annual Turkey Brood Survey

Wednesday, June 6, 2018

Help MassWildlife with the annual brood survey from June 1 through August 31

"Sportsmen and women, birders, and other wildlife enthusiasts are encouraged to assist with MassWildlife’s Annual Wild Turkey Brood Survey. The public is asked to record sightings of hens, poults (newly-hatched turkeys), and males (both juvenile and adult). For help identifying male and female turkeys please click here
https://www.mass.gov/service-details/identifying-female-and-male-turkeys-in-the-spring.

MassWildlife conducts the Annual Brood Survey from June 1 through August 31 each year to estimate the number of turkeys. The brood survey helps our biologists determine productivity and compare long-term reproductive success while providing an estimate of fall harvest potential. Turkey nesting success can vary annually in response to weather conditions, predator populations, and habitat characteristics. Citizen involvement in this survey is a cost-effective means of gathering useful data, and can be a fun way for people to connect with nature. Be sure to look carefully when counting turkey broods, the very small poults may be difficult to see in tall grass or brush. MassWildlife is interested in turkey brood observations from all regions of the state, including rural and developed areas.

2 ways to participate:

Report individual observations online
https://form.jotformpro.com/70614901778966

or

Download and print a Turkey Brood Survey form to complete over the course of the summer  https://www.mass.gov/files/documents/2016/11/sy/turkey-brood-survey.pdf

Mail completed forms to: Brood Survey, MassWildlife Field Headquarters,1 Rabbit Hill Road, Westborough, MA 01581."

This was shared from https://www.mass.gov/service-details/wild-turkey-brood-survey

Help MassWildlife with the annual brood survey from June 1 through August 31
Help MassWildlife with the annual brood survey from June 1 through August 31