The only holder of 6 Turkey World Slams in the world.

Keenan is the youngest ever holder of an Archery World Slam.
He also set the world record as the only holder of 6 world slams for turkey hunting for anyone at any age.
Keenan holds the world record for his Ocellated Turkey of 17.4 pounds.

Turkey Hunting is Keenan Adams' first love. Keenan Adams has hunted wild turkey in 5 different states and in Mexico on several different hunts. He achieved his first Turkey Grand Slam at the age of 7.

At the age of eleven years old, Keenan has achieved six World Slams.

January 8, 2005 (at right)
Still at age eleven, Keenan Adams became
the youngest person ever to take a World Slam in turkey hunting with a Matthews Bow. The turkey was taken at the Manley Farms in Gadsden County, Florida.

Keenan was born in 1993. He learned at a very young age to appreciate the land and wilderness.

His father and Uncle Buddy took him turkey hunting before he could even walk. When they would leave without him he would cry to go. By the age of three, he was at his father’s side every time his father would go hunting.

His father and Uncle Buddy were diligent in their rules of hunting safety. As Keenan turned five his Uncle Herb, who is retired from the Georgia DNR, started teaching him the importance of hunter safety.

He would beg to hunt himself. His father insisted he study for his hunting certificate. At the age of seven his father took him to take the test. The instructor informed him that he thought Keenan was too young and if he was to take the hunting certificate test that his father would not be allowed to assist. Roy stated that he understood and thought Keenan was ready to take the test. Keenan completed the test and was the only hunter out of 40 hunters to make a 100.


Nothing Left to Prove
At 14, this Bainbridge hunter has already reached turkey hunting’s apex.
 
By Nick Carter
Originally published in the April 2007 issue of GON
Read Full article at: http://www.gon.com/article.php?id=1126&cid=26
 
At the ripe old age of 14, there’s not a whole lot left for Keenan Adams to achieve in the world of turkey hunting — he’s just about done it all. Actually, most folks would say he had just about done it all back in 2003, when at 9 years old he became the youngest person ever to achieve a world slam.

In doing so, he joined an elite list of hunters who have accomplished the feat of bagging one of each type of turkey in North America — eastern, rio grande, merriam’s, goulds, osceola and ocellated. He completed the final step of that slam by killing an oscellated turkey in Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula on a hunting trip with his father and uncle in 2003.

But he didn’t stop there. Since that time, this eighth grader at Hutto Middle School in Bainbridge has one-upped himself several times, collecting an additional seven world slams. He took his last two world slams with a Mathews bow, and in the process he arrowed the National Wild Turkey Federation’s (NWTF) highest-scoring and heaviest oscellated turkey on record. He also became the youngest hunter to ever take a world slam with a bow, and the only person to hold eight grand slams.

After killing 113 turkeys, and reaching what many view as the pinnacle of the sport, it would seem natural for the allure of turkey hunting to wane in Keenan’s eyes. He doesn’t see it that way.

“It’s hard to get bored with turkey hunting. Having them gobble and come in is pretty awesome,” he said. “Every morning you go out, you have no expectations. You don’t know what’s going to happen. If you don’t get your bird, you know you’ve got to go back another time; and when you do get it, it’s so rewarding. It makes you feel like you’ve really accomplished something.”

About five years ago, Keenan retired his shotgun, picked up a bow and never looked back. He does all his hunting with a bow now, and competes in archery tournaments around the country. He was named the Archery Shooter’s Association (ASA) Shooter of the Year in 2006 after winning the association’s World Championship for the 13- and 14-year-old age group, and that’s just one on a long list of tournament wins.

“I haven’t picked up a gun in the last year,” he said. “It’s a lot more exciting; there’s a lot more challenge to it. Not everybody can pull back, get set, have the patience and follow through with it.”

Keenan hunts from a blind and does all his own calling, except in Mexico where the “jungle birds” emit a whistling call that would sound alien to most Georgia hunters. He has won numerous calling competitions, and prefers using a slate on tough birds that get hung up because he can call softly and seductively with a slate. He’ll use a box in high wind or for long-distance calling, but he’s found that the diaphragm calls he hand makes are more condusive to bowhunting.

“When that bird’s coming in, the thing you want in your hand is the bow,” he explained.

Last year, Keenan’s tactics made for an exceptionally short Georgia season. Within four days of opening day on Saturday, March 25, Keenan had three nice birds in the freezer. All three of them ranked in NWTF’s top 15 birds ever killed with a bow in Georgia; he took them all off of his family’s land in Decatur County, and he shot them on three consecutive days.

“I knew those birds were there, it was a matter of scouting good,” Keenan said. “Most people would have left the area after killing the first one, but I waited them out and killed all three. It took some patience, but it was worth it.

“Around home, my uncle, my dad and I try to get an idea of where they roost and their lifestyle by scouting around for sign. We also check food plots and listen in the mornings prior to the season.”

He took the first gobbler, a 16-pounder with a 7 1/2-inch beard and 1-inch spurs, on March 26. It was the state’s No. 15 best bow-kill registered with NWTF. He stuck the second one, a 17-lb. gobbler with a 9-inch beard and 1.125-inch spurs the next day. It ranked 11th on the list. And the third, which ranked ninth on the list with a weight of more than 18-pounds, an 8 1/2-inch beard and 11/4-inch spurs, he killed the morning of March 28. Those three birds go nicely with the No. 6 bow-kill he arrowed in 2005.
“There were two that had been hanging out together. The strutter came in and I got a 17-yard shot on him. His buddy just walked off,” Keenan said. “The next day, the buddy was the dominant bird, and he just came right on in for a 25-yard shot. The third bird was in another area, and he came in to about 33 yards.”

For many bowhunters, a 33-yard shot would be a long one on a strutting bird, but with all the time Keenan spends shooting in, and practicing for, tournaments he felt comfortable taking the shot. He already took a bird at more than 45 yards this year in Florida, which opened its season March 19.

Again, Keenan was on a trip with his father, Roy Adams, and his uncle, Buddy Adams — the two men who gave him an early introduction to the outdoors. Their hunting adventures began long before Keenan was born, when a business they built allowed them the time and money to both purchase hunting land in Georgia and begin traveling to exotic hunting destinations.

“I’ve got six girls. Keenan’s the youngest and he’s the only boy, so naturally he got to hang around with daddy,” Roy said. “He got to see all that when he was coming up — I’m talking about when he was in diapers. We used to ride him around and he got the chance to see the kind of wildlife most people don’t see until they’re grown.

“I like to say he was born and bred into it. It seems like he loves it, and he lives day-to-day for it.”

Keenan remembers all the time he spent with his dad in a blind, and he especially remembers the first turkey he ever pulled the trigger on. He was 5 years old and had accompanied his father on a hunt with the intention of watching his father kill a bird.

“One day, out of the blue, I was sitting there and I told him‘I’m tired of watching you do it. I want to shoot the gun,’” Keenan said. “I remember, I shot the gun and it knocked me back. It was a shock; I didn’t expect that much recoil. But I killed the bird and I was happy.”

Nine years and 112 dead turkeys later, Keenan is just as enthralled with the sport as he ever was, but with school work, archery tournaments and his soccer team he doesn’t have as much time to dedicate to hunting as he used to. He apparently manages his time well, though, as he is on the A/B honor roll at school.

Now he enjoys taking people hunting as much as he enjoys killing a bird himself — and with the type of season he had last year, he has plenty of time for that. Keenan said he has called up several birds for people who have never had the opportunity to kill a turkey.

“It’s almost more fun to see someone get their first bird,” he said. “It’s something different.”

Keenan also wants to learn to bowhunt turkeys without a blind. He said it has to be the most difficult thing to do in hunting.

“All those guys that take their bow out and kill birds without a blind, I give them full credit. That’s got to be the hardest thing,” he said. “A blind is the way to go. Without one, there’s like an 80 percent chance you’re going to get busted...

“Maybe that’s what I’ll try next,” he added.

Perhaps Keenan hasn’t yet exhausted all of the possibilities for turkey hunting firsts.

YOUTH TURKEY HUNTER MAKES HISTORY WITH “ARCHERY WORLD SLAM”


Bainbridge, Georgia - January 19, 2005 - On a cold winters morning in North Florida, Keenan Adams silently awaits the arrival of a wild turkey gobbler. It's January and Keenan is hunting during the fall turkey season. With 5 of the 6 species of wild turkeys already harvested, Keenan needs an eastern bird to complete his
World Slam with a bow. Reaching into his hunting vest, Keenan retrieves a B. A. Hen mouth call andreproduces the raspy yelp of an ol' gobbler. Repeating this call several times during the next hour pays off. Suddenly, a large tom appears in the clover food plot where Keenan and his dad, Roy Adams have set up their Double Bull Blind. The bird slowly feeds through the clover and disappears behind a mound of dirt on the edge of the plot. Keenan quickly raises his Mathews Mustang bow and comes to full draw, placing his 40-yard pin on the base of the gobbler's neck. The Vital Hunter arrow tipped with a 100-grain Muzzy broadhead meets its mark, and as the say, the rest is history. Archery history that is. With this bird down, Keenan is now the youngest bow hunter at age 11 to complete a World Slam with bow, and in one season to boot. It takes a special breed of hunter to obtain the "World Slam". Wild turkeys are in a league all their own. They have such good eyesight and hearing that you cannot afford to make a mistake when hunting them. If you do, then your chances of harvesting that particular bird are reduced dramatically. There are six species of wild turkeys in the world, which are native to North America. They are the Eastern, Osceola, Rio Grande, Merriam, Gould and the Oscellated. Harvesting all six turkeys is a rare feat among wild turkey hunters, whose numbers are in the millions in the United States alone. Of that group, only 90 have earned the "World Slam" certified by the National Wild Turkey Federation, and only 3 out of that 90 have been taken with a bow. Keenan's accomplishments to date on harvesting all six species have put him in a league all his own. Currently, Keenan has 5 World Slams with a gun, and 1 World Slam with a bow. Not bad for an 11 year old. Keenan does not stalk his prey. He sits out in the woods thirty minutes before twilight, wrapped head to toe in camouflage, waiting the turkey out. Keenan's call arsenal includes a wide variety of boxes, slates and mouth calls, which he uses to lure the turkeys into shooting range, which is about forty yards. It's a test of wits between turkey and man. One crunching of the bush, or a turn of a head, can spook the turkey into flight. There are many obstacles in the wait such as mosquitoes, ants, heat and high winds to name a few. Keenan often states that " it takes more than patience to take a turkey, it takes precision". Keenan's experiences have taught him that hunting turkeys is about the same wherever you go. The six species of turkeys respond to slightly different call tactics, but it would take a wildlife expert to distinguish between them. As the scenery changes throughout the different parts of North America, so does Keenan's passion for hunting the elusive wild turkey. Watch for Keenan as he appears at various hunting shows across America and on nationally televised hunting shows such as Son Country Outdoors and Turkey Country.


RECORDS AND AWARDS

Turkey Hunting Records
1st Youngest World Slam Turkey Holder
1st and Only Person to Hold 6 World Slams
Youngest person ever to take a World Slam in turkey hunting with a Matthews Bow.
Holder of Heaviest Ocellated Bird on record with the NTWF (17.4 pounds)
Holder of Best Typical Archery with NWTF
Holder of Best Overall Typical with NWTF (Ocellated Turkey)
Total of 74 Turkeys Harvested on record with NWTF

Turkey Hunting Accomplishments and Recognition's
2003 - First Turkey World Slam at 10 years old
2003 - Third Turkey Royal Slam
2003 - Second Turkey Royal Slam
2002 - First Turkey Royal Slam at 9 years old
2001 - Second Turkey Grand Slam at 8 years old
2000 - First Turkey Grand Slam at 7 years old

Keenan's Commitment to Outdoors
Lifetime Member of National Rifle Association
Lifetime Member of National Wild Turkey Federation
Lifetime Member of Quality Deer Management Association
Lifetime Member of North American Hunting Club
Lifetime Georgia Sportsman License