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Turkeys have keen eyesight, but their night vision is poor. To keep predators from sneaking up on them, they may fly onto high tree branches at night to sleep. Turkey droppings ...
Turkeys fly up into trees to sleep, and hunters aren't allowed to take them in trees, Donley said. "In the morning, you can hear them flying down, and that is when you start hunting," he said.
Although they do not migrate like some birds, wild turkeys can fly, which is why residents may sometimes spot them roosting high up in trees. If a turkey gets chased or provoked, it may fly toward ...
Turkeys scratch at the snow on sunny south slopes, where oak and beech trees grow to uncover a staple of their diet, beech nuts and acorns. They also congregate to find food around ornamental ...
They nest in high grass in the spring. Turkeys do fly, and at night they roost in trees, he said. They don’t migrate far, so any turkey in the area is probably a fellow Pittsburgh-area native.
On this Thanksgiving Day, turkey hunters all over Montana have a lot of reasons to be thankful. All across the state, populations of wild turkeys are growing and expanding their ranges. Every year ...
The Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation is midway through its $2 million four-year study on wild turkeys in the state. Researchers said there is a decline in turkey populations.
Turkeys fly up into trees to sleep, and hunters aren't allowed to take them in trees, Donley said. "In the morning, you can hear them flying down, and that is when you start hunting," he said.