What you all are saying is the reason why so many public land hunters try to get in their heads and fall in that rut.
An educated bird doesn't make the mistakes as often as we'd like as he matures and sees it all.
While you're all out there waisting your time, beating yourselves up over a tom that is pre -occupied with hens of his own, Has heard it all from that loction,I'm gonna get out there and shoot "your gobblers" next door.
Now for most that have been posting to this thread, it's been a wet season so far. Theirs a good chance that most hens that were bread early on have had their nests washed away or scavenged by predators.... what comes next you ask,???
Re-breeding and nesting again. By the end of the month most hens here will be done screwing around, and either raising a family of poults, or still warming a fresh nest. By June, it's not all that odd to see strutters still looking for love all by themselves with nare a hen in site.
When you hit these birds late season like that, it's often the one thing that pushes them over the edge to commit to that one lonesome gal that remains, but if they have learned your routine... you're humbled.
Just like to talk strategies here on toms like this, doesn't make any one of us right or wrong per situation, just a way of a different approach to a tough tom. Hopefully we can discuss some strategy a little more in depth from a seamingly simple question.
Ain't trying to highjack here, there's just alot to be learned from such a thread from those who have been chasing them before many of us were even born.