By Major L. Boddicker
A delegation of three Dutch muskrat trappers was visiting
Each was issued a Swedish Mauser in 6.5 x 55-mm, and we went into the
bowls of the plains. When we got to the ranch, I gave each a Crit'R·Call and a
five-minute lesson. Then each gave it a try and demonstrated what they could
do. The range of calling quality was from lousy to dismal. They were
embarrassed at their inability to master such a simple tool. I stuffed my
earplugs in tightly.
At the first three stands, they alternated calling every five minutes,
each taking his turn. Oh, it hurt me to listen. I had this compulsion to take
over the calling, but held back. Finally, at the fourth stand, ten minutes into
this miserable calling effort, I put my Crit'R·Call up to my lips for the sweet
sound of death that I make. I was just ready to blow when the first shot went
off. Off to my right, two coyotes were charging in, not hesitating, running
full tilt to that dismal sound. One of the Dutchmen had flattened the lead
coyote. I went into a puppy yelp and stopped the second coyote, then flattened
it with my .25-06. It was a great moment for the Dutch muskrat trappers and for
me.
Miserable calling techniques are often rewarded nicely; so, don't be
self-conscious and think negatively about your calling. Like any hunting, you
start out less than great and become great with practice and experience.
There are two basic types of hand-held calls: the open-reed type and the
closed-reed type (aka as fixed-reed). The former, like the Crit'R·Call,
Tally-Ho, and sundry copies, have the main operating feature of an exposed reed
that is manipulated with the upper lip to give it range, modulation, and
quality. The closed-reed type has an internal reed where the reed length is
fixed and therefore it cannot be modified as it is blown.
Both types of calls can be manipulated by how hard the air is blown into
them, muting them with the hands over the barrel, back pressure from closing
the hands over the barrel, and inflection by the length of breaths blown into
them.
The closed-reed calls with the pre-set reed length have a fixed sound.
They are simple, repetitive, and work fine under most conditions. It does not
take much practice or sophistication to use them, which is an advantage. On the
downside, the closed-reed calls have tendencies to fail often from moisture and
dirt interfering with the reed vibration. They commonly freeze up in cold
weather. The metal reed types often fail from the reed hardening and breaking
or warping. Replacement of the reeds is frequent under heavy use, or a new call
is needed. Compared with open-reed types, closed-reed calls do not produce the
volume or variety of sound required for consistently good results. Varmints get
educated
to the closed-reed calls more quickly. Ease of use is traded for quality and
variety of sound.
There are millions of closed-reed calls sold each year, and they are
successfully used. The average sportsman has the closed-reed call model fixed
in his mind as the only call around.
By contrast, open-reed calls have long and open reeds that are operated
on by the upper lip, tongue, and cheek muscles. An infinite number of pitches,
tones, notes, and subtle sound quality can be produced easily and
instantly—caller's choice.
The reeds are made of break-proof nylon, plastic, and epoxy that work
under all temperatures and moisture conditions. The longevity of open-reed
calls is many years. The variety of sounds varies with each caller, so varmint education
is less of a problem.
A caller can make mouse squeaks and bird tweets of ultra-high pitch by
tweaking the tip of the reed. Moose grunts and ultra-low-note bawls can be made
on the same call and reed the next moment by vibrating the entire reed. The lip
can be slid forward on the reed to produce a slurring weeep sound. The lips and
tongue can be quivered to get delicious wails and whimpers. Open-reed calls can
produce emotion of much better quality than can fixed-reed calls.
If the caller likes the fixed-reed characteristics on an open-reed call,
he can roll a rubber band onto the reed of an open-reed call to the length and
sound he wants, and leave it. Blowing with the lips behind the rubber band
produces the closed-reed sound on the open-reed call. So, Crit'R·Calls (and
copies) can be used either way with authentic sound production. Using the lip
produces by far the best sound quality.
The reeds in open-reed calls are very tough and resistant to breakage,
warping, and damage. They are easily changed or replaced and can be tailor-made
by the caller to fit his needs. Open-reed calls can use jerry-rigged reeds made
of credit cards, plastic pop bottles, collar stays, and various substitutes and
work fine.
Soon after I made Crit'R·Call, I tried to sell the open
reed call to a famous call maker. He told me "No, your call is no good.
The average hunter is too dumb to learn how to use it.” It was a good lesson.
So, at Crit'R·Call we go out
of our way to instruct customers how to use our calls. It does take a minimum
amount of practice to learn how to use them. As the open-reed calls are used
and the techniques mastered, quality and confidence improve, but simple
repetition of the basic Crit'R·Call rabbit squalls with emotion
wins predator calling contests all over the USA. Even we calling dummies can
learn how to use them. When you buy a call, read the instructions. It really is
no statement about your manhood, just read the blasted instructions! Buy an
instruction tape which gives you examples of what you should sound like. It
will bring you up to speed quickly.
Open-reed calls like the Tally-Ho, Crit'R·Call, and copies, all work pretty
much the same. Put the call in the mouth, reed up with the upper lip resting on
the reed. The barrel is pointed away from the mouth, held between the thumb and
forefinger. Place the lip or rubber band down on the reed to produce a fulcrum
so the reed length is established. Hold the lip there as you blow into the
call.
Bring the air up out of the chest and into the reed in a tight column
that vibrates the reed and makes the basic sound. Muting the call with the hand
over the barrel is important for volume and inflection of the sound. Start with
the hand closed over the barrel and as you blow into call, saying whooo, open the hand at the same time.
When the whooo is finished, the hand is open.
To use less reed, move the lip or band back, pushing the call further
out of the mouth. That produces a higher pitch and notes. Tightening or
loosening the lip bite produces higher or lower notes and pitch. Slide the lip
forward or backward as you blow, which produces nice slurring and a weep sound. Slide the call further into
the mouth, resetting the lip back on the reed produces lower notes.
Blow harder and softer, change the cadence of your blowing by holding
your breath for fractions of a second, and then resume the blowing. Wiggle the
lip or call and bring the air out of your throat with a roll. Put all of that
together and you have excellent calling for coyotes, fox, bears, bobcats, and
literally hundreds of other animals.
With the Crit'R·Call, I can sit down with the Standard and Magnum or PeeWee and Song Dog
and call every critter from the weasels to moose in the
Open-reed calls have it for volume and range. On a quiet night, line of
sight, a coyote howl on a Magnum Crit'R·Call can be heard 2.5 miles by
the human ear with normal hearing. Predators hear better than do humans. Calls
can also be quieted down to very soft whimpers by muffling with the hands and
low pressure blowing.
Open-reed calls will make teaser mouse squeaks, low- or high-volume
rabbit squalls, and variety from puppy whines, fawn bleats, doe bawls, etc. at
an instant with no change in calls or reeds. That variety of sound adds scores
of predators to the bag.
Cost of most open- or closed-reed calls is under $20. Metal, closed-reed
calls used frequently last one season or less. Calls with plastic reeds
(closed-reeds) last longer.
Open-reed calls last indefinitely. Some of the first Crit'R·Calls are used
frequently today, 27 years old with the original reeds! I have a Tally-Ho call
I bought in 1965 that still works fine.
Electronic Calls
Cassette tapes, CD's, and microchip electronic callers are available for
$1000 or less. Most run in the $250-$450 range with all of the bells and
whistles. Many have remote switches and are wireless or in one unit with the
speaker. They are portable, dependable, and handy.
Most are 12-volt with sundry battery configurations, including
rechargeable C- or D-cell replacement batteries. Claims of superiority vary,
but there is a large range of quality, dependability, range, and convenience.
The major companies—Burnham Brothers, Lohmann,
Electronic calls handle many kinds of tapes, CD's, and chips with a
large variety of bird and mammal misery. Some brands are recordings
of actual live animals; some are made from recordings of people using calls. Do
not dismiss people using calls to produce the recorded sounds. Exaggerated
animal distress cries often work better than the original animal distress
recordings.
Many are excellent, clear, with no feedback or aberrations, just the
animal sounds. The recent products are much better than the old cassette and
record sounds because of electronic computer cleanup of the flaws.
Volume, of course, varies with turning the volume switch up and down,
and the size and quality of the speaker. Generally speaking, electronic units
send sound no farther than good open-reed calls. The louder the volume on
electronic calls, the more sound distortions are amplified, and the quality
suffers. Some units are affected by side winds that interact with the speaker
to produce distortions.
Most electronic units now available, are reliable, durable, and work
quite well. However, electronics and batteries are still susceptible to cold,
moisture, and corrosion.
An alternative to the made-for-varmint-hunter-type electronic callers
are the common boom boxes and tape players you can buy for $60-$150 at the
local electronics or discount stores. Most of these units are great, with
excellent quality speakers and sound, have remote switches for on/off, volume,
and for selecting CD choices. If you don't like the color of the unit, paint or
tape them up, or put in a brown carrying bag. If you don't like the large
sizes, use the small portable type with the small plug-in speakers. They work
just fine under ordinary conditions. Point the speakers at where you think the
predator is, walk away 20 yards and sit down at a convenient place, get ready,
turn on the unit with the remote, and prepare for action.
There are several disadvantages to electronic calls. They are
inconvenient to carry around. Weather causes failures. There is an inability to
change call sounds when needed; however, you can use hand-held calls with
the electronic calls. Some remote units also allow for selection of different
sounds on the same CD at the touch of the remote button.
For convenience of putting your effort into looking for predators and
shooting, the electronics are great. The work is a trade-off—carrying some of
the units is work and inconvenient. Calling with a hand-held call is work, and
it is more difficult to concentrate on finding and shooting the predator while
blowing at the same time. Open-reed and some closed-reed calls can be used
without hands.
My recommendation is to try both and use whichever you like best. After
comparing both types of calling, I use open-reed hand-held calls 98% of the
time.
Recently, a friend called. "My friend has a mountain lion on his
farm. It is killing his calves and dogs. He called the Game and Fish and they
said it couldn't be. Must be dogs. What can he do?" he asked.
"Well, see if he can get a permit to kill it. Usually, state law
gives him the right to kill predators that are killing stock. Then take my CD#2
with African sounds, plug it in to his kid's boombox, set it on #5 (Steenbok
squalls), point it to the direction the lion should come from, turn it on, sit
back 50 yards and play it for an hour. If the lion comes in, shoot it," I
said.
The place was 200 miles from mountain lion range, out in the middle of
the northern prairie.
I got a call from my friend two weeks later. "Hey man, you know
what you are talking about. My friend did just what you suggested. He killed a
120-pound lion after 20 minutes of playing the Steenbok song.” It sure is nice
to be right some of the time!
Predators respond to a wide variety of sounds. Sounds like high-pitched rabbit
squalls will attract all predators. Some sounds, like an adult coyote yelp,
will attract basically coyotes. The following is a basic list of common sounds
and species that can be expected to respond.
Sound/Distress Cry
|
Predators That Will Respond
|
|
Cottontail,
jackrabbit, and snowshoe distress calls |
All predators |
|
Mouse squeaks |
Canines, cats,
and some weasels (badger and marten) |
|
Fawn bleats |
Coyotes,
wolves, bears, lions, and bobcats |
|
Adult deer
bawls |
Lions, coyotes,
wolves, bears, and bobcats |
|
Turkey chirps |
Coyotes and
bobcats |
|
Bear cub
squalls |
Bears,
coyotes, and wolves |
|
Cat
caterwauls, purring, and mews |
Bobcats, lynx,
and lions |
|
Coyote talk:
adult howls and yelps |
Coyotes |
|
Puppy ki-yi yelps |
Coyotes,
foxes, and wolves |
|
Bird distress
cries |
Cats, foxes,
coyotes |
|
Baby pig
squeals |
Coyotes,
foxes, cats, bears, and pigs |
When you sit down and listen to a wide selection of recorded bird and animal
distress cries, you can't avoid the conclusion that they all sound very similar
in pitch, sequence, and high and low notes. From a distance, it would be hard
to tell which critter was squalling. One essential common characteristic seems
to be the C-sharp note. Most of the serious squalls get to that high note which
flips the predators' switch on. All of these distress sounds have a similar
pulse.
I gave a seminar once in
These distress cries strike an ancient cord that probably goes way back
in evolutionary time. I visited some friends in a southern state who had a
severely retarded son. The unfortunate kid was born with no brain above the
cerebellum, so he breathed and had essential bodily functions, but he could do
absolutely nothing else—no sight, no speech, no control over any muscles, and
no awareness to respond. He was about 12 years old and about 60 pounds, in
diapers, and was handled like a baby. It took an admirable amount of guts,
patience, love, and sacrifice to deal with him. He rarely moved and required
many hours daily of physically moving his limbs and body to keep any muscle
tone in his body.
My friend had a gathering of trappers at his house to meet me. My friend
asked me to demonstrate the Crit'R·Call. As I began making the
coarse cottontail call, the retarded boy started moving and making similar
sounds like some long dormant critter finally coming to life. I stopped,
wondering if the sound was hurting him. My friend's wife asked me to continue
because she thought the sound was pleasurable to the boy. She wanted to buy a
call so she could make those sounds for him. I continued for ten minutes or so,
while the boy writhed and grimaced like he was trying to speak and reach out to
the sound. It was an interesting experience. I gave her my call.
Prey death-cries reach out from the dawn of time, sounds that make dogs
and cats—which have never been out of a house—jump. These are sounds that they
could not have heard before. I have watched 50,000 people turn around and look
at me in Time Square in
In Africa in 1987, on the
There is magic in predator calling with origins from the foggy gloom of
the dinosaur age. It is fun to know and be able to repeat those sounds to trick
the ultimate tricksters—the predator.
When you get the hang of it, there is no comparison between fixed-reed
calls, electronics, or open-reed calls. Open-reeds have it. The most important
key to successful calling is having a call that works in all kinds of weather,
is simple to use and to carry, and produces the variety of sounds needed for
tripping the hearing threshold of the predator and makes it want to come.