Hunting, Sports

Spring Turkey Hunting Begins This Weekend

Share article

VERMONT – Spring turkey hunting begins with youth and novice weekend on April 26 and 27, and the regular season from May 1 to May 31.

“The youth and novice turkey hunting weekend provides an excellent opportunity for experienced hunters to teach young or new hunters how to safely and successfully hunt wild turkeys,” said Toni Mikula, Vermont’s wild turkey biologist. 

To hunt turkeys on April 26 and 27, a youth must be 15 or younger and must have completed a hunter education course and possess a hunting license, a turkey hunting license and a free youth turkey hunting tag. 

A person who has purchased their first hunting license in the past 12 months and is 16 or older may hunt turkeys as a novice on April 26 and 27.  They must have a hunting license, turkey hunting license and a free novice tag. 

The youth or novice must be accompanied by an unarmed licensed adult over 18 years of age.  Shooting hours for the weekend are one half hour before sunrise to 5 p.m.  Landowner permission is required to hunt on private land during youth-novice turkey hunting weekend. 

The youth or novice may take one bearded turkey on the weekend and two bearded turkeys in the regular May hunting season. 

Shooting hours during the May 1 to May 31 turkey season are one-half hour before sunrise to noon, and two bearded turkeys may be taken. 

A shotgun or archery equipment may be used to hunt turkeys. Shot size must be no larger than No. 2. 

A successful hunter in Vermont’s spring turkey seasons must report their turkey within 48 hours to the Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department. This can be done at a local big game reporting station or online at the Vermont Fish and Wildlife’s website.

Last year, youth and novice hunters took 683 and 29 turkeys, respectively during the April weekend hunt and hunters took 5,178 bearded birds during the regular spring season.

“Combined with the 626 turkeys taken during the fall season, hunters harvested in excess of 159,000 servings of locally sourced, free range turkey meat in 2024,” added Mikula.  “To go from essentially no turkeys in Vermont before 1969 to a booming population that can provide over a hundred thousand meals each season as well as wildlife viewing opportunities statewide is a conservation success anyone who cares about wildlife can be proud of.”

Vermont Fish and Wildlife’s 2025 Turkey Hunting Guide is available on their website. 

Vermont Fish and Wildlife Dept.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Advertising

The Hardwick Gazette

Newsroom: 82 Craftsbury Road Greensboro, Vt.

Hours: Mon. 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., Tues 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Wed. 9 to 11 a.m., Fri. 8 a.m. to noon

Tel: (802) 472-6521

Newsroom email: [email protected]
Advertising email: [email protected]

Send mail to: The Hardwick Gazette, P.O. Box 9, Hardwick, VT 05843

EDITOR
Paul Fixx

ADVERTISING
Sandy Atkins, Raymonda Parchment, Dawn Gustafson, Paul Fixx

CIRCULATION
Dawn Gustafson

PRODUCTION
Sandy Atkins, Dawn Gustafson, Dave Mitchell, Raymonda Parchment

REPORTER
Raymonda Parchment

SPORTS WRITERS
Ken Brown
Eric Hanson

WEATHER REPORTER
Tyler Molleur

PHOTOGRAPHER
Vanessa Fournier

CARTOONIST
Julie Atwood

CONTRIBUTORS
Trish Alley, Sandy Atkins, Brendan Buckley, Elizabeth Dow, Hal Gray, Abrah Griggs, Eleanor Guare, Henry Homeyer, Pat Hussey, Willem Lange, Cheryl Luther Michaels, Tyler Molleur, Kay Spaulding, Liz Steel, John Walters

INTERNS
Dayne Bell, Megan Cane, Brigitte Offord