...but spring is the perfect time to listen for gobbling Toms and witness their incredible courtship displays, and thanks to conservation and restoration efforts, it's much easier to find them in the woods now...
A male Wild Turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) walks in full regalia as he puffs his feathers up in a courtship display. He really does have an air of royalty as he glides through the brown leaves, wings dragging the ground, and his iridescent green, bronze and gold feathers catching the light perfectly for maximum effect.
In early spring, when winter's leaves are still brown and crackle underfoot, male turkeys start strutting for females. It's an image we usually think of at Thanksgiving, but spring is when you usually see it!
...every emotion a turkey has shows on his face where "mood colors" of bright red, blue and white can change in seconds when hens or other toms are around (source: "Birds of Forest, Yard, & Thicket," by John Eastman, pg. 7).
Turkey lingo! The skin that hangs from a turkey's beak is a snood. The bumpy, wart-like projections on the skin...caruncles, and the crazy rope of feathers that hangs from his chest...a beard! What's a group of turkeys called? ...a rafter or a gang (source: USGS).
This gobbler (male turkey) had 6 hens in his harem, but they weren't interested in his strutting and displaying, and most, like this hen, walked away non-plussed.
Turkeys roost in trees at night. They also will fly up to trees when startled (or when they hear a camera shutter click...). This female flew effortlessly up to branches about 30 feet off the ground. She remained there for about 10 minutes before deciding to fly back down and join the foraging flock.
Courting Toms take their job seriously. I watched this male and the six hens in his harem for over 45 minutes. Only once did he let his feathers down, and that was only for a second or two. While the females foraged and ate seeds, the male never once tried to eat. This behavior was confirmed in Eastman's "Birds of Forest, Yard, & Thicket," pg 7, where he writes, "Belligerent toms strut and display in spring, sometimes hardly feeding for days at a time."
I love the return of the Wild Turkey. When I was a kid, turkeys were not in any woods I ever played in. For me they were birds that showed up on Thanksgiving decorations and only took the form of a male in courtship display. According to "The Birds of Ohio," by Bruce Peterjohn (pg. 143), Wild Turkeys were extirpated from Ohio by 1900, so no wonder I had never seen one in the wild, but in February of 1956, Wild Turkeys were released in southeast Ohio. In the 80s they were released in the glaciated counties, and in the 90s, in the central and western counties. For the past three years I have heard and seen them regularly along the Little Miami River. Before then, I saw them once about eight years ago along the bike trail. They are skittish birds and can disappear into the brush and woods with amazing speed. I saw this rafter of turkeys in Tennessee on the Cumberland Plateau in the woods behind my mother- and father-in-law's home last week when Matty and I headed down for spring break.
The toms are on the move here, too, and I love seeing them. I haven't actually had the chance to watch them display, but two of them came walking through my yard one evening this week, which was a real treat.
ReplyDeleteWonderful! There were wild turkeys right in town here yesterday. I finally managed some photos of them when a neighbor called me and said they were in her backyard. Check my blog post today!
ReplyDeletewhat a wonderful display to witness!
ReplyDeleteWow Kelly--You taught me more about turkeys than I have ever known. Great education! Thanks!!!!
ReplyDeleteThose males certainly are pretty --when they spread out and do their strutting...
Great pictures.
Hugs,
Betsy
Fun when you talk turkey with us! Nice captures! I'm so glad they're making a comeback, and it's exciting to see them in the wild.
ReplyDeleteWonderful series. I don't remember seeing them in Ohio, either, but have seen quite a few of them in the Smokies near Cherokee, NC. We will be there again in a little more than a week. Perhaps they'll let us take some portraits. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for these pictures, I had no idea about this elaborate display, it is impressive. The colours in the face are quite vivid too.
ReplyDelete...thanks everyone! I wish I could have been close to these turkeys, but they are skittish and take flight so easily (which is a good thing for them. If I were shooting with a gun instead of a camera, letting me get close would be dangerous!). I had to crop the images down a lot, hence the poor quality shots.
ReplyDeleteLOVE turkeys!! Kelly, do stop by... I photographed my friend "Torvid Turkey" peeking into my house through the sliding glass door. He comes daily... knocks on the glass with his beak when his pile of cracked corn dwindles - nature is such fun!!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.thegipsyintheparlour.com/2012/03/wordless-wednesday-turkey-at-door.html
Hi Kelly
ReplyDeleteI love turkeys but they do not occur here. It is good to see they are making a comeback in Ohio they also have a released population in Ontario now where I grew up, there were none there when I was young.
Regards
Guy
Hey Kelly--have you read "Illumination in the Flatwoods" by Joe Hutto? He raises two broods of wild turkey. Wonderful insights, about turkeys as well as humans.
ReplyDeleteKelly, like you said, these birds used to be rare sights to see, but now I have seen them in several states and what a treat it is. I love that "from behind" shot of the feathers all spread out like a fan. I knew about the snood and the beard but has not heard of the caruncles." Wonderful post!
ReplyDelete