Stuff You Should Know - Gobble Gobble: Turkeys!
Episode Date: November 26, 2020Turkeys are a very interesting bird as it turns out. Which may be why many people are leaving it off their Thanksgiving table this year. Learn all about them right now! Learn more about your ad-choic...es at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
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Welcome to Step You Should Know,
a production of iHeart radios, How Stuff Works.
Gobble, gobble, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, and there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant,
and there's Jerry Jerome Rowland.
Couldn't come up with anything at the last second.
That's right, and this is Stuff You Should Know
about turkeys, yeah.
So I need to just apologize at the beginning of this episode
because I could not help, and I know I will not be able
to help myself from making Vernon, Florida references.
The great, great documentary from Errol Morris,
one of the prominent about the citizens of Vernon, Florida
in the 1980s and inland Florida Panhandle small town.
And one of the lead characters in that documentary
was Mr. Henry Schipes, he was a turkey hunter.
And all he does is talk about turkey hunting,
and I know it by heart, me and all my friends know it
by heart, and we quoted a lot, so it's really, really hard
not to just talk like Henry Schipes.
So I'll try not to, because it's so random
that 99.9% of the people, it won't be worth it
for like the 100 people that'll think
that's the best thing ever.
I don't know, man, I've found over the years
that it's good to cater those people sometimes too, you know?
I might throw in an occasion,
and I'll explain what I'm talking about maybe,
but we do need to thank the Humane Society
for what the bulk of this research came
from this really great, great, great article
that someone, a nameless person at the Humane Society
put together from a list of great, great sources.
So I was surprised to see something so thorough.
It was really great.
It was written by the mysterious Tom T.
It was really in favor of turkeys suspiciously.
And now I'm Thanksgiving Day too,
so we also need to apologize for,
we're not trying to guilt you or anything like that.
Maybe don't listen to this one for a week.
I will say though, Chuck,
like I'm not eating turkey anymore after this,
and it's really kind of a pain
because turkey's my favorite,
my favorite meat of all time is turkey.
I know, I'm sorry then, it is tough.
I knew turkeys were pretty cool and pretty smart,
but it is tough to read this stuff
and still slice into that bird.
Well, it's funny to hear that they are smart
because they have such a great reputation
for being just totally stupid,
but it turns out that that's really not right at all.
It's at best a human misinterpretation,
maybe at worst a cynical justification for eating them.
But one of the first things that we'll remark
about turkeys right out of the gate
that a lot of people don't know
is that Ben Franklin was more in favor of turkeys
as America's national emblem as far as birds go,
than he was the bald eagle.
He had a big problem with the fact
that eagles don't necessarily hunt
as much as they bully other birds
for whatever they just hunted.
He said that the eagle does not get his living honestly.
He steals from the fish hawk
and is too lazy to fish for himself.
The turkey, however, is much more respectable,
a true original native,
and the turkey would not hesitate
to attack a grenadier of the British guard
who should presume to invade his farm yard.
And after researching turkeys,
I daresay he was probably right about that.
Yeah, and the other thing that I'm surprised
he didn't mention was, and also by the way,
male turkeys during the breeding season,
literally their head and neck turns red, white and blue.
Yes, I noticed that too.
That is so obvious, it's such an obvious pick.
Like at one point during the year,
you got a red, white and blue bird.
Yeah, exactly, let's see a bald eagle do that.
Stupid eagle.
So the other thing, the other reason why,
and I think a lot of people think that Franklin said
that that needed to be like the great seal
of the United States, and that's not the case.
He instead, I think, proposed Moses as the great seal,
which is odd, but another check in Ben Franklin's
pro-turkey stance is that turkeys are indigenous
to North America, and there's actually,
we're down to two species.
One, the common turkey, which is the kind that you or I
or anybody else living north of Mexico are familiar with.
They're all over the place.
They're all over the United States and Canada.
But the weird thing is, there's also turkeys
in Central and South America, and it turns out
that they're a really hardy, adaptable species,
and again, way smarter than you probably
give them credit for.
Yeah, I mean, turkeys, they do like warm weather,
but they can survive in a lot.
Like you said, I remember very distinctly
when I lived in New Jersey one snowy morning
looking into my backyard, and there were,
it was like a painting or something.
There were three deer and six wild turkey.
Wow.
Just walking together through the snow in the backyard.
And I didn't know that they would venture that far north,
but they're all over the place.
They are, did you say the name of the ones in Mexico?
Nope.
The oscillated turkeys.
Yeah.
In the Yucatan Peninsula in Guatemala and Belize,
they are different looking than the turkeys.
We know they're smaller, a little shorter.
They have sort of a copper, bronze, green plumage.
And I think the male turkeys have larger spurs
and do not have beards.
And we'll explain what all that is in a minute.
Yeah.
So if you're talking turkey, specifically male turkey,
another term for them are goblers or toms,
for young males, they're called jakes.
Love that.
And then adult females are hens,
and then hatchlings, babies of both sexes
are called polts, P-O-U-L-T-S.
Yeah.
The adult females gonna be about eight to 11 pounds.
Adult males about 17 to 21.
We mentioned, you know, if you look at a turkey,
they've got all kinds of crazy stuff going on on their head.
They look like, you know, something from a zombie movie.
Yeah.
And every single adult turkey has
what's called a carnicles, a snood.
Sounds like Dr. Seuss.
And a do-lap.
Yeah.
The carnicles are those big fleshy things
at the bottom of the neck.
Both of them.
The snood is the stuff that protrudes
from the top of the head and sort of flaps over
across the bill, and then that do-lap
is that little thin skin under the throat
that's so tuggable.
Yeah, and if it's just one thing of skin
that goes vertically down the neck in the front,
it's a do-lap, if it has more than one,
it's called a waddle.
But these things, the carnicles, the snood and the do-lap
are the things that make turkeys
outrageously ugly to humans.
But ironically, those are the things
that attract other turkeys.
Yeah.
They, like you said, change color.
They're unique to each turkey.
And they are like, apparently if you're a female turkey,
you're looking for a guy with a longer snood,
that's an attractive thing to you.
So I just find that really great that like,
we're like, that is just,
those things are just so ugly, they could stop clock.
And to the turkey, it's like, man, nice snood, buddy.
You're looking good.
Yeah, and I think Carnicle Snood and Do-lap
would be like a great name for a comedy bluegrass trio
that would be on He-Ha or something.
Yeah, right.
Oh my, wow.
So the beard that I mentioned too, males.
Wait, was that a Vernon, Florida reference?
No, no, no, no.
No, I'm paranoid.
For most turkey strains,
the males are the only ones who have a beard.
And that is this, it's a feather,
it's a modified feather, sort of in the upper chest
that keeps growing.
It's like a, you know, if you have one of those rat tails,
that you wanna grow out for life,
a lot of He-Ha references, I guess.
Yeah.
If you grow about three to five inches a year,
and if Vernon, Florida is correct,
then Mr. Shipes would point out that the longer the beard,
the more sort of prize trophy it is if you're a turkey hunter.
Sure.
Like that'd be akin to a large rack of antlers
because they mount the beard on a little plaque.
Right.
Right.
The other thing about male turkeys
that you can differentiate from a female,
well females have feathers that go up the back of their head.
So it looks like they have a little mullet going on.
Males do not, they have a bare head.
And then males also have spurs,
like do claws almost coming off of their legs.
And hens typically don't.
Right.
And like I said, those males during breeding season,
they turn, the carnicles go red,
the white is the crown of the head,
and then the neck and the side of the face go blue.
And there's just nothing more American than that.
It's true, but that's just the goblers, right?
The hens don't turn, yeah.
So like you said, and I think I said first,
you can find turkeys all over the place
in all sorts of different conditions,
whether it's hot out, whether it's covered in snow,
whether there's deer around, who cares?
Turkeys are down for hanging out.
They just need, or I should say prefer,
certain kinds of habitats,
huge trees in a mature forest.
And typically they want mast bearing trees.
And mast, I don't remember what we were talking about recently.
Oh, I think it was squirrels hiding nuts.
Mast is like one of my favorite words of all time.
It's just so earthy and natural, I just love it.
But it means like acorns and like tree nuts
that you can find in North America.
And that's one of the things that turkeys eat.
So they need lots of trees that have lots of mast.
And the other thing is that trees are roosting sites.
Turkeys, although they're not typically thought of
as able to fly, they can fly for short distances
and they roost in trees at night,
which I don't think I've ever seen a turkey in a tree.
I haven't either.
You know, I see turkeys quite a bit on the side of the road
or taking hikes and stuff like that.
But I guess it's because at night,
I'm not hiking at night,
that I've never seen a turkey in a tree.
Well, sure, yeah, because they're diurnal, right?
Well, yeah, I'm just saying that must be the reason.
Like I always see turkeys sort of just pecking around
on the trail.
I think that's legitimate.
I was laughing because you said,
you made it sound like the turkeys were hiking
going on the hike.
Technically, I guess they are.
I can see them with like big chunky socks on
and vasco boots, just being all serious.
But you mentioned their range,
their home range is what it's called.
And their home range is dictated by how much food is around,
how much of that mast is around.
And if they, you know, they have pretty big ranges anyway,
but if there's a lot of food around,
then they may maintain like 400 to 1,000 acres,
which is huge.
And that's if it's abundant.
If they don't have a lot of food around,
they have been known to maintain ranges of 8,000 acres or more
and travel up to 50 miles to different home ranges
if they can't.
They don't, technically they don't migrate,
but if the birds maintaining 8,000 acres
and traveling 50 miles, they're migrating around.
Kind of, yeah.
But I mean, that must be a really poor habitat
because turkeys are not picky eaters.
In addition to mast, they'll eat everything
from seeds to lizards and basically anything they find
that's chock full of protein.
They typically like things like seeds, plants,
fruit berries, that kind of stuff,
but they'll eat live animals.
They'll eat a snake.
Yeah, they'll eat a snake.
They'll eat insects.
They're crazy.
Yeah, and then in particular when a turkey's born,
the young turkey, the poult,
for the first week or two of their life,
they're eating nothing but insects constantly.
Yeah, and that's why they prefer a range.
They like that forest, but they like the forest
on the edge of some grassy areas
because that moves them,
they get some closer to those little insects
that you're gonna find for those poultes.
Right, exactly.
That's actually where poultes are born and raised
is in the grassy area at the edge of a forest,
which is pretty cool and just quaint as all get out.
It's like cottage core for animals, you know?
Yeah, if you think that they may need to live
near a lake or something to get their water
or a river or a stream or any kind of wetland,
you are wrong.
I'm sure they love that kind of scenery,
but they don't need it for water.
They can get water, their water intake from vegetation.
They can get it from that morning dew,
succulent insects, little small pools.
They can kind of forage through all that stuff
to get enough water.
Yeah, I mean, like when there's like a lot of snow
on the ground, they don't hibernate or anything,
but they go into like this kind of like
just hanging around the tree for days of time.
Yeah, chill mode for sure.
And the water intake is just a little bit of snow
that they're eating off of the tree
and the food is maybe just a butter too
that they can find on the tree they're sitting on.
Yeah, and you know, they do well.
Turkeys are thriving, they eat a lot.
They, one thing you will not see very much
unless they're sick is a skinny turkey.
Under-nourished turkeys are pretty rare.
Like I said, unless there's some sort of disease
or maybe if it's like in the middle
of a really, really long winter,
they might thin up a little bit,
but turkeys eat a lot
and they're generally pretty healthy and plump.
Right, so like we said, they're diurnal, right?
They are active during the day, just like us humans.
And you said they eat a lot.
So they spend a significant amount of time eating
and when they eat, they'll eat just about anything
they can come across.
But when they eat, they eat the thing
that they're eating whole,
especially if it's something soft like a berry, right?
They just swallow it whole,
it gets digested along the way
and they poop out whatever's left on the other side.
But they also eat things like seeds and nuts and mast.
And they have a gizzard, which is like a second stomach
that hard stuff gets diverted to.
And this stomach is basically all muscle.
And they also eat while they're pecking around for food,
they also eat little pebbles and stones
and bits of like hard things like bone.
And those things stay in their gizzard
and they become what are called gastro stones
or gizzard stones.
And they end up basically like a rock tumbler
that crushes up things like seeds and mast
that can then be diverted over to the regular stomach
for digestion, which is pretty cool.
Yeah, another reason that I kind of identify with turkeys
is that they do chill a lot.
They get busy feeding and stuff and exploring around,
scraping around, pecking around on the ground.
But after they have eaten,
they hang around for hours at a time.
They will preen, it's called dusting
when they just sort of move around in the loose soil.
It's a dirt bath.
Yeah, and they kind of just rest basically
until a few hours before sunset
and then they start feeding again.
And then this is amazing.
So right before nightfall though,
they go back to those trees at night to sleep.
And if they get caught sort of unaware,
it's sort of like a vampire and they look up
and that sun's going down.
They will haul butt back to their tree.
They can run 10 to 20 miles an hour
and fly in short bursts up to 55 miles an hour
to get back to those trees because once sundown comes,
if they're not in their little homestead
that offers a lot of protection,
they're in big time danger for predators.
Sure, can you just see a turkey running back
like gobble, gobble, gobble, gobble, gobble, gobble.
Babies.
So what I find interesting about them too
is a lot of people don't realize turkeys
are extremely good at seeing and hearing.
We don't think that they're very good at smelling,
but their sight and their hearing are so amazing
that it really doesn't matter about the smell.
Apparently they have three times the acuity
of the average human's eyesight.
And then in addition to that, they also see in color,
which is rare for a bird.
And they also have between a 270
and a 300 degree field of vision.
Humans have about 180.
And the reason why they can see so much around them
is because the turkeys' eyes are on the side of its head,
which on the one hand gives them a different disadvantage.
They don't have binocular vision like humans do.
So they have terrible depth perception,
which is why you'll see footage of a turkey
looking at something and it'll switch sides of its face
that it's looking at you
because it's trying to discern depth that way,
just kind of quickly creating binocular vision
like a flip book.
But what it lacks in binocular vision,
it makes up for with its incredible hearing
because their hearing is such they can identify
the location of a sound really, really well.
So they might not be able to see depth,
but they can hear depth in addition
to all the amazing stuff that they can see.
You think we should take a break?
I just, that's fine.
I'm just going to keep talking through the break
because I'm just so in love with turkeys right now.
All right, we'll be right back.
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So, you know, before the break, you're
talking about their hearing in Vernon, Florida,
which have you seen that yet still?
No.
I know, I have not.
Got to see it.
OK.
It's one of the greats.
Documentaries, that is.
But Mr. Shipes really gives the, like, when you listen
to this man talk, and I'm not a hunter at all,
but you really get a sense that turkey hunting is
one of the most challenging hunts that you can undertake
because of how smart they are.
And he says, they are smart.
Boy, he's one of those guys.
Oh, he's like that, huh?
Yeah, yeah.
But how smart they are and then that hearing,
like, you have to be so quiet and so all of your movements
have to be so deliberate.
And even the slightest, like, cracking of a stick,
that turkey will poke his head up and then just
be gone out of there.
So although I'm not a hunter at all and would never
shoot an animal, when you listen to this guy,
you can't help but be sort of impressed with, or maybe you
just fall under his spell of how much he loved it.
I don't know.
So, yeah, so turkeys are really good at hearing.
They're really good at seeing, and they're easily spooked,
which all combined makes them very difficult to hunt, yes.
Yeah, so as far as their flocking and their behaviors,
they live in separate flocks, the hens and the toms do.
And then once the spring comes around
and the days get longer and then the warmer temperatures
sort of start coming in, then the males
are going to leave their winter flocks
and they're going to start, you know,
now it's time to party, basically, with the hens.
And they're going to start like many animals.
There are a lot of rituals of trying to get their attention.
They're gobbling.
They have a couple of peaks in gobbling.
And the first one is at the very beginning
of the breeding season, when there are a lot of hens around
and you're trying to make yourself known as a worthy male,
then you're going to have a second flock
after most of the mating has taken place.
There's a lot less gobbling going on.
And, but those males who didn't mate or maybe they did
and they're really trying to have another party, basically,
that's when their second peak is going to happen.
Right, but in between those two peaks,
there's less gobbling because by that time,
the hens are like, all right, I'm into this.
So the males don't have to try as hard.
And apparently that second peak in gobbling
is kind of the more desperate.
It's like at, you know, at 1.50 a.m. at the bar.
Oh, totally, it's like, is anyone,
anyone still in a party, basically?
Gobble, gobble, gobble, gobble.
Anybody around?
Gobble, gobble.
But you got to do it like the night of the Roxbury guys,
but they're saying gobble instead of him, him, him.
I think a Tom Ken and Will mate with multiple hens
and hens actually may breed with the same male more than once.
I don't think anyone has made any argument
that they're in love, but you never know.
Let's say at the very least, they have chemistry.
They're also polygamous.
If you're an Eastern wild turkey,
they think that they sort of have a harem, basically,
where you have a bunch of different hens with one Tom
until they've mated.
If you are out West, you might see
what's called a lek-like system, L-E-K, which is,
it's basically a, I mean, it's sort of group mating
mating and group gobbling,
like a bunch of Toms will get together
and sort of gobble together.
A lot of times, a group of siblings,
like those Carter boys, they get together
and put on quite a show for the ladies, that kind of thing.
And that actually makes sense.
The harem makes sense because there's just such
an abundance of turkeys that one Jake, or no, one Tom
can mate with multiple hens all at once,
and the species continues.
But where it's more spread out,
for them to all kind of come to one place,
it makes sense because it's much more convenient.
But also because all these different displays
of manliness, of tomliness, I guess,
really gets the hens in the mood,
so it kind of gets them prepared for mating
much more quickly and efficiently too,
which is a real advantage of the lek system.
Yeah, and you actually did not misspeak
because Jake's can mate.
They're just way less successful because they're Jake's.
Gotcha.
Maybe there's some hens that sit around
and say like, you know, I'm really more
into Jake's than Tom's.
Because it happens.
And the other one's like Nancy.
Well, I never.
But they do.
Jake's actually can mate, but because they attract females
by those big shows and the best gobbles,
they're just usually not quite there yet.
Yeah, and we'll talk a little bit about,
I love, we always set up like all the stuff
we're gonna talk about in every episode,
and then we actually talk about like maybe 70% of it.
Yeah.
But there's actually, there's hierarchies
in turkey flocks, which we'll talk about,
but when like the Carter brothers show up
or there's young jakes and older ones,
depending on the dominance of the turkey,
that turkey is much more likely to actually mate,
but all the turkeys will be strutting their stuff,
getting the hens in the mood.
It's really kind of this communal thing.
And that actually makes sense because turkeys,
it turns out, are super, super social animals,
which makes the fact that the hens,
once they have mated and go off to lay the eggs,
they do that themselves.
It's basically the one thing they do as individuals,
but they do, like basically to a hen,
they will go off, they will find a nice grassy area
at the entrance of a nice wood,
and they will start laying eggs.
And they'll lay one egg and cover it up and then leave.
And then the next day, usually about the same time, weirdly,
they come back and lay another egg covered up.
And then as they start laying more and more eggs,
they kind of reach like this critical threshold
to where they're like, okay,
I'm emotionally invested in these eggs now.
I'm just gonna stay around here and guard them
and then eventually incubate them.
And they do.
And then about 24 hours before the eggs start to hatch, Chuck,
they actually start making sounds.
Basically saying, I'm about to come out now.
Yeah, it's really cute.
This little pipping sounds and this pecking with,
and this is one of the cutest words I've ever seen.
The first little hole that these things make
from within the egg to get out is made with an egg tooth.
How cute is that?
It is very cute.
But I mean, the fact, can you imagine
seeing a little turkey egg pipping?
It's probably amazing.
And I know the hen is in trance because the hen
starts to make little encouraging clucks
like, come on, long little fellas.
That's right.
Let's get on out, let's get on out.
It's so cute.
And it could take about a day
for all these poults to hatch.
And they are very mobile from the time they are hatched,
but they are also very closely bonded to mama hen
and the siblings for a little while, a pretty short while.
For a couple of days, they all sit around together.
They imprint on one another.
And one of the big things that they do
is they learn what mama sounds like.
We'll get to the calls later,
but there's something called an alarm call,
which is exactly what you think it is.
It's a very, very important way to say,
hey, everybody, get out of here.
There's a raccoon or a bobcat in the woods or something.
And they have to learn their own mother's alarm call.
And that's what they're doing in large part
for those first couple of days.
Yeah, and within the first couple of days
and actually a couple of weeks, they can't fly.
So they're real vulnerable.
Because remember, the mom nests in grassland,
not in the trees.
So until they can fly, they can't roost in trees.
So their big defense is to just scatter and stay still.
Yeah, and as in frozen still for up to a half an hour,
if they hear that alarm call,
these little baby turkeys will just freeze like mannequins,
it's amazing.
It is amazing.
One of the things when a mother hen gives birth
to a brood of poults,
they're usually, there's a one to one ratio
between males and females, between jakes and baby hens,
which I found pretty amazing.
Unless, Chuck, something else happens.
Yeah, this is, I feel like usually when we cover animals,
there's always one really astounding adaptation
that we cover a lot of times more than one.
But in the case of turkeys, these hens,
if they don't find a mate and don't mate,
they can still have little babies through parthenogenesis.
They can produce viable eggs.
It doesn't happen a lot, it seems like,
and the embryos, I think very few of them survive,
but it is medically impossible for a hen
to produce little baby eggs and have one.
And if they do have one, and it actually lives,
it is going to be a male hatchling always,
which is counterintuitive to me, I think,
if it's an evolutionary adaptation,
it would seem like they would be female.
Yeah, I don't know.
But it's like bees aren't unfertilized bee eggs,
don't they turn into male drones?
And it's just the fertilized ones
that become female workers?
I don't remember, that was a while ago.
I'm pretty sure, if I remember correctly.
So it's weird that it would happen like that,
but yeah, that's a pretty rare occurrence
that parthenogenesis, you know?
Yeah.
So now you've got all the little polts of hatches,
and they've been running around eating bugs in the grass,
and it's been about 17 days, and now they can fly,
so they're starting to roost in the tree.
And at first, adorably, they're still scared little babies,
so they roost under their mother's wing at night,
but as they get a little more confident,
they'll start to spread out into some of the surrounding
branches of the tree in the roost.
And what you've got now is a new flock of turkeys.
But like I was saying, turkeys are extremely social creatures.
So those flocks typically tend to join other flocks,
especially mother hens with new polts.
They'll live with other flocks of mother hens
with their own polts,
and they'll become these kind of like huge mega flocks,
where if you walk through at night,
it seemed like every branch of every tree around you
was filled with turkeys.
And that would happen probably sometime in the spring,
like the early mid spring,
after the eggs have hatched,
and the babies are all now roosting
in the trees with their moms.
Yeah, and here's another one that really tugged
on my heart strings.
A lot of times, once they have joined these other flocks,
if you don't have any siblings,
if you're the only survivor of your hatch,
you will oftentimes take up with another mother hen,
and they will sort of adopt you into their little family
so you can have siblings.
And if that doesn't knock your socks off,
they also adopt the original mom to come along.
Yeah, me too.
Basically, they are just like, come and join our family.
You only had one little baby that lived,
and they need some siblings,
so why don't you and your little hatchling come along
and your little polt and join us?
Come have Thanksgiving with us.
Amazing, no, they don't say that word.
So you've got-
The T word is what they say.
Yeah, T day.
So that's one kind of flock.
There's also a lot of,
like the jakes, the young males in that flock
will continue to stay until I believe the fall,
and they'll leave and they'll go form other flocks
with other jakes and sometimes older goblers,
and especially with their siblings too,
they'll hang out with them,
and then the young hens and the mother hens
will stay together and form their own flocks.
So there's different flocks,
but turkeys are so social that they've been found to,
if you take a bird, a turkey from its flock,
and put it somewhere else,
it'll basically just stand in one spot
and make a scared sound
until you take the turkey and put it back with its flock.
Like they have been shown to be basically debilitated
when they're moved from their flock,
and I was watching this video called Turkey and Dog,
Best Friends Are Inseparable.
There must be a colon in there.
Those are the best things on the internet.
So this turkey and this dog,
like seriously, we're housemates, friends,
like really great friends,
and the woman who adopted the turkey,
I think as a poult, was like,
well, the turkey needs to be on a farm with other turkeys.
So she took it to a farm to go live its life
as a turkey on a turkey farm,
and it did the same thing that I've just described.
It just stood in one spot in the barnyard
and made this horrible call for,
I think three days she let it go on,
and then finally it was like, fine, come back home.
Right when she got it back home with the dog,
the turkey stopped and was back home
and has been there ever since.
It's definitely worth watching.
That video, if you're like, I don't know,
I still like to eat turkeys,
and once you watch that one,
that's gonna be it for you, pal.
You can't eat turkeys or dogs anymore.
No, I can't eat pigs either.
So another, I guess we mentioned the alarm call,
turkeys have an astounding ability
to communicate with each other.
They have a lot of different vocalizations.
Mr. Henry Shipes talks about a lot of those,
the different kinds of gobbles
that a turkey hunter has to be acquainted with
and make yourself to attract turkeys.
But it calls them yelps, of course.
There are three kinds of yelps.
There's the tree yelp, the plain yelp,
and the plain lost call.
And then there are a couple of basic calls,
the clock and the alarm putt,
and then a few other just complex calls.
There's the cackle, the gobble,
and what's called the kiki.
But that tree yelp is what they're gonna make.
That's sort of their morning routine.
The first thing they do in the morning is start tree yelping.
And it's basically like, hey, everybody, good morning.
How did you sleep?
Good morning, good morning.
There's the plain yelp,
which is like just during the day,
if you wanna say, hey, everybody,
let's come huddle up over here.
Because when they eat as a flock,
they might spread out over a quarter acre,
but we've seen that they will always have
at least one constantly looking out,
and they'll trade that job off.
But there's always at least one bird looking out
for the rest of the flock ready to make a call.
Might be a plain yelp, it might be an alarm putt,
but whatever that is,
it's going to get the bird's attention very quickly.
Right, then you have that plain lost call.
It's sort of like the plain yelp,
but it's usually louder.
It's got some more urgency to it.
And that, they think, is more for family.
It's like, hey, you and all your brothers and sisters
get over here too sweet.
Yeah, there's also, what else?
The cluck, which is to say, hey, hey, Chuck, cluck, cluck.
Right.
Cluck, Chuck.
And you look up and you say what?
It's specific to a person.
What?
And I say, I forgot what I was gonna say.
And you go back to eating.
I just said specific to a person, meaning a turkey person.
Right, a tom or a hen.
There's that alarm putt,
which is basically like, hey, everybody,
there's something weird going on.
The kiki is if a little polt or a younger turkey
is a little worried and wants to be reassured
or doesn't know where everybody is,
that's probably a pretty cute one.
I listened to some of these and they're not,
they're not, it's not onomatopoeia.
Like the kiki doesn't sound like a kiki to me.
I don't know what they're talking about,
but it sounds like a wine almost.
It's weird.
And then you had the cackle,
which that's sort of like hello and goodbye.
When you're coming into your rooster,
you're leaving in your roost,
you're gonna cackle and say, I'm here.
Right.
The gobble, everybody knows the gobble,
but it turns out that's actually not that frequent sound.
It's one of the least frequent sounds they make
because it's typically made by toms
when they're strutting their stuff for mating to get it on.
Literally strutting their stuff.
Right, and then here is one of the facts
of this chock full of fact podcasts.
Turkeys purr, and when they purr,
it's quite obvious they're purring with contentment
exactly like a cat.
Yeah.
It's pretty neat.
I saw another video of a turkey being stroked and petted
and it just curled up in the person's lap purring.
Amazing.
It is.
So the other thing when they've laid these eggs
and incubating, they will turn them periodically,
which is really great.
And what they're doing then is they're letting these,
letting them exchange oxygen and CO2 as well as they think,
and this makes a lot of sense,
keeping the little embryo from attaching
to one side of the egg.
So if it starts to attach, they'll just turn it
and then it'll flop down and not attach itself.
Nice.
And then there's also re-nesting, right?
There is, which is basically like if the turkey is disturbed
during the nesting process,
she may go off and create a new nest.
I get the impression the other eggs are abandoned.
Or remember we said that she is emotionally invested
after a certain point.
If she's disturbed then she just abandons the nest
and doesn't do any more nesting that season,
which is very sad.
Yeah, that's super sad.
Agreed.
So you wanna take a break?
Let's do it.
Okay, we'll be right back everybody.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
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It's a podcast packed with interviews,
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Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
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Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
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Each episode will rival the feeling
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Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called
on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to
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I'm Mangesh Atikulur and to be honest,
I don't believe in astrology,
but from the moment I was born,
it's been a part of my life.
In India, it's like smoking.
You might not smoke,
but you're gonna get second-hand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe
has been trying to tell me to stop running
and pay attention.
Because maybe there is magic in the stars
if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in
and let me tell you, it got weird fast.
Tantric curses, major league baseball teams,
canceled marriages, K-pop.
But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet
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Situation doesn't look good.
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And my whole view on astrology, it changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are gonna change too.
Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app,
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So Chuck, I think at the beginning,
I was saying that turkeys are way more intelligent
than we think, and that's true, right?
They are smart, boy.
One of the smartest we got in this country.
That's a good, good verdict.
I think that's a good, good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
I think that's a good point.
That's a good, good Vernon, Florida accent.
He's passed on, by the way.
One of the cool, and if you're interested in that movie,
go see it.
And there's also a movie crush episode
where one of my really, really good friends, Mike,
comes on and talks about Vernon, Florida.
And he actually struck up a friendship with Henry Scheibs
via telephone for the remainder of his life.
Oh, that's neat.
That's a long telephone call.
Well, they talked off and on quite a bit.
It was really really special.
Oh, gosh.
That's cool, man.
So he just called them out of the blue?
Yeah, he and Henry, he would call them up.
Well, hey, Mike, how you doing, buddy?
And this was 20-something years after Vernon, Florida
was from the, I think, early 90s or maybe even late 80s.
And so he just, you know, he got a kick out of it
that Mike thought he was famous.
That's cool.
That's cool, man.
So you never answered my, oh yeah, you did kind of answer
my question.
Turkeys are rather smart.
There's a longstanding myth that turkeys are so stupid
they'll actually drown when it's raining
because they look up at the rain
and the rain falls down their gullet and drowns them.
Have you not heard that?
No. It's true.
I've heard that before.
It's true that there's a myth.
The myth itself is totally, totally wrong.
It's been observed something similar
has been observed mistakenly in domesticated birds,
meaning like factory farmed turkeys.
And they've actually shown that if that has ever happened
it's not the turkey looking up to see the rain
because the turkey wouldn't look up to see something above
it would look from the side of its head
because it has monocular vision.
Yeah.
So it wouldn't be looking at the rain.
And if it is looking up and has ever drowned
or something or seemed to have drowned
it was because it was having a certain kind of seizure
that apparently domesticated factory farmed turkeys have
as a general condition.
They have seizures and actually die
from those kinds of seizures fairly frequently.
So they think some farm worker saw a turkey have a seizure
while it was looking up while it was raining and died
and that actually might have given birth
to this incredibly wrong myth.
It turns out that was my cousin.
They are smart and they have great memories
which is in the animal kingdom memory is an interesting thing
and a lot of times a pretty good indicator
of intelligence and just something more going on there.
Wild turkeys have a great memory.
They can remember very precise locations.
They can go back to the same location miles away
at the same exact time of day to get food.
So they have a really good internal clock as well
and hens and toms.
They can also check supposedly differentiate human faces.
So like they can tell humans who are different
based on their face which is pretty smart if you ask me.
Oh, totally.
They can be a nuisance if you like have a farm.
They're droppings can carry disease at times
but they, you know, they're easily scared like you said
like there's a list of things and how to get rid of turkeys
that we came up with.
Well, didn't invent but came up with from experts.
We've been testing them out all week.
And it seems like all of them are like, you know,
turkeys get scared super easily.
So scare them off or if they're a real problem
on your property put up a motion activated scarecrow
or a water sprinkler or something like that.
Any kind of loud noise flailing your arms
that'll get rid of turkeys.
They just, they're scared of you.
They want to get out of there.
They're not aggressive.
They can be intimidating if you're a kid
cause they're big but even a kid's going to scare a turkey off.
Yeah, they are easy to scare off
but they can also be really intimidating and aggressive
especially if it's a Tom during mating season.
So you're supposed to do the same thing to turkeys
that you do to coyotes and it's called hazing
where you show them your dominant
and you can do it by everything from turning the hose on them,
throwing a tennis ball in their general direction,
opening umbrellas, a big one.
But you're basically saying like, I'm not scared of you
and in fact I'm going to scare you off
because if you don't do that
apparently then they become increasingly more difficult
to get rid of because they think they're dominant to you
or say a family member.
And if you combine that with somebody
whether it's you or a neighbor
or something feeding the turkeys
or even letting them eat birdseed out of your bird feeder
that can be a problem actually
especially if you don't like turkeys running at you.
Yeah and the other really cool fact about hazing
is they say that like everyone in your family has to do it
if you want to solve your turkey problem.
Like you've got to get, if grandma lives there
she's got to get out there and haze that turkey.
If you've got a four year old
you got to send that four year old out there
to haze that turkey supervised I would imagine.
But like every person in that house has to exert their dominance.
Yeah, exert it with extreme prejudice all over that turkey.
Gross.
So I guess that's it.
One thing I saw Chuck for Thanksgiving today
88% of Americans will eat turkey
which actually seems right.
Doesn't seem high or low.
But get this, that translates to 700 million pounds
of turkey on average or 46 million turkeys
all killed and eaten on a single day today.
Goodness me.
And then that's a lot of turkeys.
It's a lot of turkeys.
So if you want to know more about turkeys
go watch some turkey and dog friendship videos.
And that might make you regret what you just had to eat.
And since I said that it's time for Listener Mail.
Yeah, and before Listener Mail
I just want to close the window on the Vernon, Florida thing.
If you don't know what I'm talking about
it was a documentary originally
and this is fairly interesting.
Errol Morris went down to this sleepy town
like I said inland in the Florida Panhandle
to do a documentary on these people that live there
who would cut off their limbs for insurance money.
And it was called Stubtown was the nickname.
He went down there.
No one would talk about it.
And so he found himself down there
without a documentary subject all of a sudden.
And so he just after talking to these people said
well this town is a documentary in and of itself
and he just turned the camera on the citizens
and there's probably like 10 or 12 of them
sort of interviewed through the whole thing
that that's cut together.
And that's all it is.
It's these people that live in Vernon, Florida.
Pretty cool.
Yeah, I need to see it one day.
Yeah, it is.
It is a cult classic and a true documentary legend.
It's really great.
So Listener Mail this comes from Erica.
Hey, Josh, Chuck and Jerry.
Listen to the podcast episode on fruit flies.
I want to say that Chuck's pronunciation
of the word Drosophila is correct.
Wow.
That's rare.
Having worked in a basic research laboratory for years
I've often pined for a science dictionary
to help with pronouncing scientific terminology
and nomenclature.
For example, unless you chat with researchers
on a regular basis, how would you know
to pronounce the gene BRCA1 as BRCA1
and CDO as kiddo while PD1 is just PD1?
I don't know how you would know.
You wouldn't.
You need to make smart friends.
I think is what it comes down to.
That's right.
She says, as long as we're discussing pronunciations
you mentioned in your episode on the US interstate system
that Californians add the word the for any freeway highway
number.
I've lived in the Bay area my whole life.
I hesitate to generalize for all of Northern California
but at least in the Bay area.
Most people say things like the rest of the country 101
highway 101 instead of the 101.
Anyone who says the 101 is most likely from Southern
California.
God, that makes sense.
Yeah, so I guess that is sort of that makes sense.
It's an LA thing.
Right.
Yeah, that's what I always associate it with for sure.
So that is Erica.
Well, thanks a lot, Erica.
That email was just chock full of info
and we appreciate it big time.
Thank you.
If you want to be like Erica and send us an email
chock full of info, we love them.
You can send it off to us at stuffpodcast at iheartradio.com.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and
Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show Hey Dude
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker
necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back into the decade
of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iheartradio app
Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts about my
new podcast and make sure to listen.
So we'll never ever have to say bye bye bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iheartradio
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