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Mike Sharpe

640 Cepi DriveSuite 100
Chesterfield, MO 63005
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April
10

Spring turkey season doesn't sneak up on you. It builds. The days get longer, the timber starts to green up, and somewhere in the back of your head you start doing the math on how many weeks until opening morning. If you're hunting the Midwest this spring — or trying to find the right piece of ground to hunt — here's what you need to know about when seasons open and what actually matters when you get there.

Missouri

Missouri is legitimate turkey country. Strong populations, diverse habitat, and a long history of serious spring gobbler hunting make it a destination state for hunters who know what they're looking for. The 2026 season opens with youth weekend on April 11–12, followed by the regular season running April 20 through May 10.

Public ground exists, and some of it hunts well. But private land is where the real opportunity lives. Less pressure means birds that haven't been educated by a parade of hunters, and unpressured birds are a different animal entirely — more predictable, more responsive, more killable.

a close up of a turkey in a field of grass

Iowa

Iowa's reputation is built on whitetails, but anyone who's hunted spring turkeys there knows the state can flat-out produce gobblers. The 2026 youth weekend runs April 10–12, with regular seasons opening April 13 and running through May 17.

The competition for public access heats up fast, especially on peak weekends early in the season. Hunters with private ground can control pressure from the first day through the last — and that control compounds over time when you're also making habitat improvements that keep birds coming back.

a turkey with its mouth open

Illinois

Illinois has a healthy and growing turkey population, and the season structure reflects it. Youth seasons run March 28–29 and April 4–5. The first regular season opens April 6, with the final season closing May 14. Zones and season segments vary across the state, so check your specific unit before you plan around a date.

Public land is available, but limited access permits and concentrated pressure make consistency hard to come by. Private ground changes the equation — you're hunting birds that haven't been called at all week by other hunters, and that matters more than most people realize until they've experienced both.

a close up of a turkey in a forest

Kansas

Kansas doesn't get talked about the way Missouri and Iowa do, but it should. The mix of timbered creek bottoms, agricultural ground, and open grassland creates exactly the kind of layered habitat that big Eastern gobblers thrive in. The Youth Season runs April 1–14. Archery overlaps that window starting April 6. The regular season opens April 15 and runs all the way through May 31 — one of the longer seasons in the Midwest.

Walk-in areas offer public access across the state, but private land is where you control the variables. When you own the ground, you decide who hunts it, how often, and how the habitat gets managed. That's not a small thing.

A wild turkey walks across a dry, grassy field.

Public Land vs. Private Land

Public land is how a lot of hunters get their start, and there's nothing wrong with that. But hunting pressure in the Midwest has increased steadily over the past decade, and pressured birds are a different problem than unpressured ones. They've been called at. They've been spooked. They've learned that a hen yelping from a specific ridge at 6 AM sometimes ends badly.

Private ground removes most of that. You control access, you control pressure, and if you're managing the habitat intentionally — roost timber protected, strut zones maintained, food sources established — you're building something that gets better every year instead of just reacting to whatever the public land gives you.

What Makes a Turkey Property Worth Owning

Not every piece of ground hunts the same. The properties that consistently produce birds tend to share the same characteristics:

  • Mature hardwoods along ridges and creek drainages for roosting
  • Open areas and ridge tops where gobblers can strut and be seen
  • Agricultural fields or food plots that pull birds into patternable locations
  • Reliable water throughout the property

When a property checks all of those boxes, you've found something that's genuinely hard to replace.

The Bottom Line

The best turkey hunts don't happen by accident. They happen because someone put in the time to understand their land — where the birds are roosting, how the terrain moves them, and what every corner of the property has to offer in every week of the season.

If you're ready to find that property, or want an honest read on what the ground you're already hunting is worth, reach out. That's what we do.

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