Every May, wild turkey chicks (poults) begin to hatch in Indiana, and DNR needs your help counting turkey broods (hens with poults) and hens without poults.
Brood reports have been collected every year since 1993 to calculate the annual Wild Turkey Production index, which informs biologists about population status and guides management decisions for the species.
Please share your 2024 observations with us online from July 1 until Aug. 31. Recording observations takes less than five minutes, and no login is required.
We rely on your observations to calculate our Production Index, so every report counts! We appreciate your participation.
The wild turkey brood reporting period is July 1 - Aug. 31
Wild turkey hen with ten poults. Photo by Dan Kaiser.
Help the DNR Division of Fish & Wildlife monitor summer production of wild turkeys by recording wild turkey sightings during July and August using our online survey tool.
Why count turkeys?
Brood surveys provide useful estimates about annual production by wild turkey hens and the survival of poults (young turkeys) through the summer brood-rearing period. Summer brood survival is generally the primary factor influencing wild turkey population trends. Information on summer brood survival is essential for sound turkey management. Information gathered through the brood survey includes:
- Average brood sizes (hens + poults). For example, in the photo above there is one hen with seven poults, for a brood size of eight.
- Percentage of adult hens with poults.
- Production Index (PI) = total number of poults/total number of adult hens
What is a wild turkey brood?
A wild turkey brood is composed of at least one adult hen with young (poults). As the summer progresses, multiple broods may gather into what is termed a “gang” brood with several adult hens and multiple broods of poults of varied ages. During summer, adult gobblers (male turkeys) play no role in raising a brood and either form small male only “bachelor” flocks or are observed as a single gobbler.
No gobblers should be reported.
- 2022 Turkey Brood Report
- 2021 Turkey Brood Report
- 2020 Turkey Brood Report
- 2019 Turkey Brood Report
- 2018 Turkey Brood Report
- 2017 Turkey Brood Report
What should I report if I see a turkey brood or some turkey hens without poults?
We are interested in the following observations of turkeys from across the state:
- Number of adult hens with the number of poults or
- Number of adult hens without poults and
- County and date of each observation.
Please provide as accurate a count of both hens and poults as possible. It is also just as important to record observations of hens without poults. Don’t compile multiple observations as one report, instead report each different observation separately, even if observations of different broods are made on the same day in the same county. Understand that by mid to late August, turkey poults are normally about two-thirds the size of an adult, and a juvenile gobbler (jake) can be about the same size as an adult hen. Suspected repeat observations of the same turkeys during the same month should not be recorded.
Wild turkey hen with eight poults.
Need help identifying male and female turkeys?
Females are generally smaller in body size, about the size of a Canada Goose (8-12 lbs), and their coloration is duller brown to buff with no obvious iridescence. In general, female wild turkeys do not have a visible beard. In contrast, males have larger bodies, much larger than a Canada Goose (18-28 lbs), and their general coloration is very dark, appearing black with an iridescent sheen. Most adult male wild turkeys have a visible beard.
Turkey Teaser Results
The full brood report will be posted above once it is available. In the meantime, enjoy these maps that show participation by county and brood reports by landcover from the 2023 Turkey Brood Reporting period. If there are no reports from your area, but you saw a turkey brood this past summer, make sure to check back in July and August to submit your own reports and contribute to turkey management.
If you have questions about the turkey brood survey, please email Wildlife Index, at
The Indiana State Department of Agriculture (ISDA) is excited to once again be a part of the 15 greatest days of summer this year at the Indiana State Fair. The fair runs Aug. 2 – 18 and is closed on Mondays. We encourage all fairgoers to stop by and say hello at any of ISDA's locations on the fairgrounds.
Normandy Barn | Building Hours: 9:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m. ET everyday
Explore all things Indiana Agriculture inside Normandy Barn and Garden Center! Be sure to check out the newly added solar panels on the side of the barn.
Pathway To Water Quality | Hours: 9:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m. ET everyday
The Pathway to Water Quality, managed by the Indiana Conservation Partnership, is a model watershed that shows how land “sheds” excess water and what that means to you.
FFA Pavilion | Building hours: 9:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m. ET everyday
Join the Indiana FFA State Officers at the FFA Pavilion every day for mini golf and a petting zoo.
Indiana Grown Marketplace | Building hours: 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. ET everyday
Shop locally grown, raised, processed and/or packaged products daily in the Indiana Grown store. The Indiana Grown State Fair Marketplace will offer fairgoers the opportunity to shop over 400 unique products from nearly 100 local Indiana Grown members.
Kristy Purlee, CEO of the Washington County Family YMCA, announced that Temple and Temple Excavating has made a generous committment to the Y's Capital Campaign.
The company's support is a significant boost to the efforts to enhance the programs and facilities at the WCFYMCA.
Purlee said, "Temple and Temple Excavating's commitment to our cause exemplifies the community spirit that makes Washington County such a wonderful place to live and work. We are deeply grateful for their support and look forward to making even more impactful changes with this contribution. Join us in thanking Ken Temple, and Temple and Temple Excavating for their incredible support! Together, we can achieve great things for our community."
To learn more about the Capital Campaign and how you can contribute, visit the website at wcfymca.org or email CEO Kristy Purlee at
By Monika Spaulding
With hopes of helping struggling students to reach their full potential, Homestretch is looking for community support as it gets established in Washington County.
Last Thursday evening, the group held a fundraising, informational dinner at Westview Church. During the event, community members heard from the organization’s board about what the group is doing and wants to continue doing in the community.
Maria Burks led the evening, discussing everything from the group’s logo to their mission. She said Homestretch is something that has been on her heart for years, she just wasn’t sure how to get it up and going. That’s when she reached out to others about her vision and the ball started rolling.
The group specifically helps students who are 18 years old, are seniors in high school and do not have a home. She said although those are very specific terms, there is a great need to help students who match those criteria.
“This is a real problem that lives right here in our county,” said Burks. “We have a homeless camp. We have homeless kids.”
She said the goal is to get kids in a home their senior year and help them with life skills, including things like money management. This will allow students to finish high school in a more stable environment, get their high school diploma and be ready for the real world.
Burks said she is someone who wants to find out where God is working already and join there. She has been walking through open doors to make this organization a reality.
“We are in the iron grip of poverty in this area,” she said, adding that there are kids living in sheds, no bed, no water, no electricity.
She said when bad things happen, people seem to ask, “where is God in all of this?”
“God’s weaving a pattern and we all have a part in it,” she said, gesturing to everyone present. She said everyone in attendance has been part of her life in one way or another and bringing everyone together to work on this project is one example of God at work.
Burks reached out to David Miller at Hoosier Uplands about 15 months ago. Her original thought was to have a house where these students could live, but Miller convinced her that it would be too big of an expense and the upkeep, insurance, etc. would be too much. That’s when she turned to the idea of finding host families, people who would be willing to let these students live with them for a school year.
“Sustainability is the key,” said Burks. “Why start something if you can’t keep it going?”
She decided that host families would make the program more sustainable. Often students in this situation are “couch surfers” or kids who go from home-to-home sleeping at friend’s houses, places where they feel comfortable. With Homestretch, those places can become year-long homes for these students.
Hoosier Uplands liked the idea of Homestretch and saw the need, donating $10,000 to get things started, which allowed them to get the 501(c)(3). Burks said after figuring that part out, the question became how can we bring resources to the homes and help them?
Thanks to a fund with the Washington County Community Foundation, the families will receive a $400 stipend every month to help with expenses. They will also give $100 a month to the youth to help with teaching money management. Host families will help get them on their feet, get doctor’s appointments, etc. and give them the care they may not have received in the past.
Burks said WCCF Director Judy Johnson shared with her information she came across that were “rules” to follow to keep yourself out of poverty. The three rules were: graduate from high school, wait to get married until after age 21 and do not have children until you’re married, work a full-time job. Burkes said if these are followed you have a less than 2% chance of living in poverty.
“We want kids to take responsibility for their own life,” said Burks. “Personal decisions trump anything the government will ever do.”
Attendees Thursday evening heard testimonials from West Washington students who were helped by families in the community.
Charles Madden Jr., who was a 7th grader when Burks was the school counselor 10 years ago, was one of the success stories. His dad was arrested at a football game and everyone wanted to make sure Burks talked to him because he’d be so upset. Burks said he was upset, but it was because he didn’t want to blow the good things he had going at school. He was a good kid who didn’t do drugs and alcohol and he wanted to make sure he stayed that way and that he graduated from high school. He needed someone in his corner to support him and his goals.
Madden said coach Phillip Bowsman did a lot of mentoring for him. He got the encouragement and support he needed to graduate. His parents didn’t graduate, making him even more proud of his accomplishment. Now, Madden is getting ready to graduate college from Indiana State in construction management.
“Charles flipped the lens for me,” said Burks. “He was telling me that ‘what I need is support.’”
Another testimonial was a student who didn’t have a place to live or stable environment to grow in. His grades were suffering, and he missed a lot of school. This past school year, he moved in with Coach Jeremy Lowery. He turned his grades from Fs and Ds to As and Bs and only missed one day of school. He graduated and is currently working full time at a factory in Madison.
Robert Chandler is a student who moved in with the Nance family. He said he learned “water can be as thick as blood.
“They were there for me every single day. It has changed my whole life.”
Tracy Smith lost her parents when she was 5 and her sister was 1. They lived with grandparents until she was 17 when her aunt and uncle took over due to the death of her grandparents. It was not a good situation.
She said she met Don and Sherry Elgin through her best friend who was with the Elgin’s all the time. They stepped up and took Smith into their home.
“They were loving and consistent,” she said, adding that two years later, they took her sister in, too. “They gave me a place to be a teen instead of having to grow up too soon.”
These are just a few of the success stories that Homestretch would like to build on in Washington County.
“When we tell people about this, a light comes on in their eyes: they want to give us money or they want a kid,” said Burks.
There is a school committee at West Washington that helps find students who need placement. The committee includes counselors, teachers, coaches and parents. Applications are also on the Homestretch website.
The goal is to get the program going to benefit students at all three county schools.
The organization needs help in many ways and encourages the community to help in whatever way they can: monetarily, providing a home or serving on the organization’s board.
Learn more at homestretch-foundation.org.
Clark County – July 24, 2024: A pursuit along US31 in Clark County ended in a two-vehicle crash that sent all occupants to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries Wednesday afternoon.
At approximately 12:04 Wednesday afternoon, Trooper Clay Boley observed a white Chevrolet Blazer make an unsafe lane movement on US 31 near Lewis and Clark Parkway. The Blazer increased its speed and continued north on US31. Trooper Boley followed and observed the vehicle’s license plate was expired. When Trooper Boley attempted to stop the Blazer, the driver, later identified as 50-year-old Jason Dale Arbuckle of Branchville, Indiana, sped northbound at extreme speeds, and Trooper Boley gave pursuit.
The pursuit continued northbound on US31, reaching speeds near 100 mph. As the Blazer continued north, Arbuckle allegedly disregarded the stoplight at US31 and Hamburg Pike and collided with a blue 1993 Ford pickup truck, which came to rest in the southbound lane of US31. The Blazer continued off the highway and came to rest in a grassy area just off the west side of the roadway and immediately caught fire. Arbuckle advised he could not move as the vehicle fire began to intensify. Trooper Boley quickly ran to the passenger side of the vehicle and was able to pull Arbuckle out through the window to safety. The Blazer was soon fully engulfed in flames.
EMS personnel transported Jason Arbuckle and the occupants of the pickup truck to University Hospital in Louisville for non-life-threatening injuries.
As of this news release, the two occupants of the Ford truck remain in University Hospital.
During the investigation, officers discovered Jason Arbuckle was wanted for a parole violation. As a result of the pursuit and subsequent investigation, Arbuckle is now facing the following additional charges in Clark County:
· Resisting Law Enforcement with a Vehicle, Causing Serious Injury – Level 5 Felony
· Criminal Recklessness – Level 6 Felony
· Driving While Suspended, Causing Injury – Level 6 Felony
· Possession of Methamphetamine – Level 6 Felony
· Reckless Driving, Causing Injury – A Misdemeanor
Officers with the Louisville Police Department took Jason Arbuckle into custody after his release from the hospital.
“All subjects are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in court.”
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