NWTF: Turkey Revolution Year 5

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Turkey Revolution Year 5: Giving Back

By Chester Moore

IN 2019 I BEGAN a quest to raise awareness to wild turkey conservation.

The goal was to use photojournalism to show the story of wild turkeys in Texas and around America. I believe that a turkeys go so, does the health of the forest.

If we get forests right for turkeys, everything else benefits.

The author photographed this big Eastern gobbler in Newton County

The author photographed this big Eastern gobbler in Newton County. (Photo by Chester Moore)

I photographed Eastern turkeys in the Pineywoods of East Texas, Florida’s Osceola, Gould’s in Arizona, Merriam’s in Colorado, and Rio Grandes in numerous locations.

This journey was epic, challenging, and fun.

But most of all, it was revealing.

The very fact that wild turkeys were down to 1.5 million birds in 1973 and here we are 50 years later with around 6.7 million is an incredible testament to conservation.

The National Wild Turkey Federation was founded that year and has been a force for positive change on behalf of turkeys to this day serves as a point of fundraising, expertise, and motivation for turkey and forest health projects. Our Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) are doing a great job managing turkeys and bringing Eastern turkeys back.

But there are problems with turkeys in América.

In New York for example, there has been a large decline in birds. Just across the border from me in Louisiana, a similar change in turkey numbers has occurred.

Other challenges including development are challenging not only to these great birds but other wildlife. I got to see that firsthand while traveling from the eastern seaboard to the Sky Islands of Arizona.

This journey clarified that wild turkey conservation is not only a worthy pursuit but a vital one.

Wild turkeys are animals’ hunters can get behind and everyone in America can understand if educated. Forest health might be a big pill to swallow but ensuring the future of such an iconic, American bird has appeal.

During this process, I have done numerous presentations at schools, foster group homes, and for families and found that kids connect with turkeys too. And while the current crop of biologists, forestry workers, and other environmental professionals are doing a good job, what will the future hold?

I believe the charge to keep is not only to keep conserving turkeys but also to inspire young people to take up their cause. It’s great to have kids turkey calling contests and events like that, but it needs to go deeper.

It needs to touch the heart and go to a broader audience.

Maybe there can be others who see a photo of a turkey in a magazine, clip it out and place it in a scrapbook as I did when I was a kid. And maybe one day they will end up writing about their turkey conservation journey.

I’m no one special but I have been able to do special things involving wild turkeys and my beloved wild sheep and it began in childhood with a scrapbook.

How much more powerful would it be if programs designed to inspire a love of wild turkeys and turkey conservation were to touch the hearts of children across the wild turkeys’ range?

There are programs in existence and kudos to them.

The following are some things I have done with kids involving turkeys over the last few years and they have been wildly successful, judging by the smiles on their faces and feedback from parents and educators.

Many states have license plate programs benefiting conservation. Texas has license plates featuring desert bighorns, horned lizards and largemouth bass and Florida has manatee plates.

A fun project for kids is to have students design a wild turkey license plate. They can either draw it or use a photo editing program. Have them use their imagination for any state using any of the five varieties of wild turkeys.

Parents can email these designs to chester@chestermoore.com. We will post entries on our Higher Calling Wildlife social media and will have an annual contest via our social media platforms to determine the best design. The winning entry will receive a special wild turkey prize package.

If you have mounted turkeys, calling expertise, enough photos for a PowerPoint presentation, and a love of kids, try a turkey day at school.

My friend Cindy Childress is a teacher at Mauriceville Elementary in Southeast Texas. For the last two years, I have done presentations on wild turkeys and wild sheep at different times.

In 2022, in November, when everyone is thinking about turkey, I did a presentation called Beards & Bighorns that addressed wild sheep and wild turkeys.

I connected with NWTF and The Wild Sheep Foundation to get the kids turkey and sheep decals and let them learn about all wild turkeys with a special emphasis on Eastern turkey restoration in their area.

You don’t have to be an expert or educator to do this. Teachers love to have people come to their classes and it’s always a hit with kids.

Easter egg hunts are a long-held American tradition that goes along with the global holiday.

In 2022 students at Little Cypress Christian Academy in Orange, TX, and Empowerment Church in Port Arthur, TX got a conservation twist with their egg hunts.

Through our Higher Calling Wildlife outreach, we put on turkey egg hunts.

The idea was to raise awareness of the presence of wild turkeys in East Texas and point school-aged kids to their conservation needs.

For each hunt, a dozen wooden eggs were painted to look like wild turkey eggs. Kids were instructed to turn those in to get a special prize package including caps, decals, and rulers’ courtesy of NWTF.

Many other plastic eggs were set out with special wild turkey wooden challenge tokens and other items inside.

Our model is to partner with schools, churches, and other groups already doing an egg hunt and to add to what they have. It blesses them by making their event bigger and it gives them a unique chance to captivate the imagination of kids regarding wild turkeys.

A full-body Rio Grande turkey mount was on display and while handing out a prize package to a third grader who found one of the wooden turkey eggs, I heard something that blew him away.

This little third grader walked up and pointed at the turkey mount and said, ‘We need to help these birds and raise money for them. They’re cool.”

You can not only make a difference in turkey conservation but in the life of a child.

That’s a win-win and our world could use a whole lot more of those these days.

And we could use more kids thinking that wild turkeys and raising money for them is “cool”.

That is revolutionary.

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