Delaware wild turkey harvest sets spring hunting season record
Hunters reported harvesting 785 wild turkeys during Delaware’s month-long spring turkey season, which is 38% more than the 2022 hunting season total and a new all-time high harvest for the state. The Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control announced the statistics July 13.
The total easily eclipsed Delaware’s previous record harvest of 706 turkeys in 2016. The record harvest and plentiful turkey hunting opportunities in the First State are testament to the conservation success story of this important species. A restoration effort started in the mid-1980s returned the iconic native gamebird to Delaware for the first time since the late 1800s.
Gobbler harvest during each week of the month-long season was similar to previous years, with 365 turkeys harvested during the first week, 149 in the second week, 129 for the third week and 109 the last week. Anotherl 33 turkeys were harvested during the special one-day hunting opportunity provided to youth and non-ambulatory adult hunters on the Saturday before turkey hunting season opened. Included in this year’s harvest was the largest turkey recorded in Delaware history, weighing in at 27 pounds, 8 ounces.
Delaware allows only the harvest of turkeys with beards – almost always males – during the spring season, the only time of year turkeys may be hunted in Delaware, and hunters are limited to one turkey per year. Despite their rarity, nine turkey hens with beards were harvested by Delaware hunters in 2023. Other season highlights included the harvest of 32 non-typical turkeys, consisting of gobblers with more than one beard. Of those, 26 had two beards, six had more than two beards, and one bird was taken with eight individual beards. The longest recorded beard was 13.5 inches, and the longest spurs on a harvested bird were 2.0625 inches on the right leg and 2 inches on the left leg.
The record-size (gobbler was taken on private property located in Wildlife Management Zone 4 in Kent County. Turkeys were taken this year in 17 of 18 Delaware wildlife management zones. A wild turkey harvest hot spot was along a corridor of management zones comprising western Kent County and Sussex County, which together accounted for 83% of the total harvest in the state. Zone 1A, which is in New Castle County north of Interstate 95/I-295, was the only zone where turkeys were not harvested.
This year, 643 turkeys were harvested on privately owned lands and 135 on public lands, with the harvest location of seven turkeys unknown. The number of turkeys taken on public land in 2023 is also a record, which should continue drawing interest in the state’s turkey hunting opportunities, managed by the DNREC Division of Fish and Wildlife. Quality hunting opportunities on public land continue to be widely available statewide.
For hunters planning ahead, the 2024 wild turkey hunting season will open Saturday, April 13, and run through Saturday, May 11, with the special day for youth and non-ambulatory hunters set Saturday, April 6. Those planning to hunt public lands should submit a public lands turkey lottery application, with information available in the 2023-24 Delaware Hunting & Trapping Guide. Hunters are required to successfully complete a turkey hunter education class before hunting wild turkeys in Delaware and before applying for a permit to hunt on public lands; more information can be found at de.gov/huntersafety.