Colorado Merriam's at 40 paces, 1 pm with 20 gauge #7 TSS. DRT.
I hunted all morning, and saw several toms milling around with their hens, but they certainly weren't interested in what I was selling. I hadn't seen anything for a while, so I decided to head back. As I'm walking uphill, I hear a tom shock gobble to a crow that flew overhead. "Hm, he seems close," I thought to myself. I walked a little farther and made a few quiet yelps. He immediately gobbled back. Close. I crawled over a little rise to try to put my decoy out in a small clearing, and as I'm crawling (with my shotgun 10 yards behind me), he gobbles again. REAL close. So I abandon the decoy and turn around to belly crawl through some cacti back to my gun, and sit at the base of a big Ponderosa pine. Not 30 seconds later, he emerges out of the bottom headed into a little clearing. He puffed up into a full strut and gobbled again. That was all I needed to pull the trigger and down he went. Didn't even twitch. I bet it was less than 3 minutes from when I first heard him shock gobble until I put him down. I've shot several turkeys later in the morning and early afternoon after they get off their hens in the morning. I've found that if you can get one of those birds to gobble at your call, there's a pretty high percentage that they're coming toward ya. I've been super impressed by TSS out of my 20 gauge.