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Wed, Aug 20 2008 

Published: April 25, 2008 12:47 am    print this story   email this story   comment on this story  

Mr. Jesse’s Unbelievable Stories

By Otha Barham

As the final days of the 2008 spring gobbler season wind down, I was moved to go back into a folder of notes I have on this revered endeavor. The file contains scribbled remnants of interviews and ideas generated over many years chasing turkeys and the great stories that these marvelous birds generate.

There is one sheet of paper from one of those yellow pads that I must have had with me when I talked with Mr. Jesse Burroughs just before he died. The colorful old Kemper County man had plenty of turkey stories and those around him had even more stories that involved Mr. Jesse. My notes about him are, as usual, unclear, yielding just snippets of information. But among my incomplete scribblings are at least the remnants of great stories.

To appreciate Mr. Jesse’s contributions to the body of local wild turkey lore, one must understand that he never seemed able to clarify in his mind the difference between the truth and an untruth. And that distinction wouldn’t have mattered to him anyway. I have recorded on this page in previous columns stories of his assertions about his deer hunting exploits. It was only during the last years of his life that I learned of his reputation in the turkey woods.



Two accounts



This one tattered note I found provides the following gleaning from a story told to me by Mr. Jesse’s son, James. Jesse was set up and calling a turkey for himself and Mr. Bud (Branning?) of Neshoba County. The two were seated against trees very close together and Mr. Jesse told Bud, “Now Bud, I’ll tell you when to shoot the turkey.” Mr. Jesse was making his wing bone sing.

The gobbler came in on Mr. Bud’s side and Bud cut his eyes toward Jesse and Jesse wagged his head slightly indicating for Bud not to shoot yet. On came the bird and Bud, ready to shoot, again stared at Jesse and got another slow shake of the head.

Mr. Jesse continued to cluck to the strutting tom and signaling Bud to hold his fire. The gobbler walked all the way around to Jesse’s side whereupon Jesse shot and killed it.

Later, to some of their friends, Jesse gave this account of the story. “I called this gobbler right in front of Bud and he just froze up and couldn’t shoot it!”

Bud replied, “Why you big liar! I would look at you and you would keep shaking your head no, no, no. And then you did the shooting!”

Another story Jesse told was when a mosquito lit on his nose just as a turkey gobbler he was calling stepped into view. “I let him bite until that turkey got right and then I let him have it!” I am sure he was referring to both the turkey and the mosquito.



Future story



Here is a note I made that day half a dozen years ago when I talked with Mr. Jesse and son James. I jotted it sideways on the page, an addition after I thought the interview was over I suppose. It reminds me to ask Robert Hembree, who I would later meet and forget to ask, about a turkey they named Row Hoe (or Ro Ho?) and a white hen the gobbler used to court. Apparently they killed Row Hoe after hunting him five years. I need to talk to Robert and get that story.

Remembering Mr. Jesse Burrough’s stories got me to doing some deep thinking, about as deeply as turkey hunters can think that is I figure we would remember the stories for a long time without his special stamp of incomparability. But could it be that he knew his stories would persist longer if they were enhanced by his outrageous lies, like the episode with Mr. Bud who “froze up” on that Kemper County gobbler?

And maybe even Mr. Jesse’s passing was actually another of his crafty lies. Sometimes in the Kemper County turkey woods I think I hear his wingbone “singing.” And sometimes I get a glimpse of him slipping around a briar patch beneath the blooming dogwoods.

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Photos


Mature wild turkey gobblers strut to show off and attract hens. Strutting consists in part of dragging extended wing tips on the ground, this breaking off the tips. These older birds are the source of many challenges and resulting stories by hunters None/SUBMITTED PHOTO (Click for larger image)

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