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Buck Gardner Goose Caller 'Gander Hammer' Camo Green/Smoke - Polycarbonate - EOL

Description

Single Reed Polycarbonate Goose Call

Features:
• Quick-Tune™ guts for easy reassembly
• Fast reed pick-up and responsiveness
• Handed-tuned and tested.
• Loud volume
• Wider tonal range over double reed calls
• Good value
• All weather durable
• Colour: Camo Green/Smoke

This sleek-looking call is big on sound and volume but won't break the bank. It is extremely easy-blowing and forgiving for beginners as well as experienced hunters. Buck Gardner's exclusive Quick-Tune™ guts and reed system make for simple cleaning and re-assembly.

Double O-rings on the insert form an airtight seal with the barrel to enhance sound quality. Each call is hand-tuned and tested before shipping.

The original short-reed Canada goose call is still the easiest operating goose call ever made. Each call has a shaved reed for fast pick-up and is hand-tuned to ensure performance that far exceeds the price. The Quick-Tune™ guts and reed system make cleaning, re-tuning, and re-assembly simple. The double O-ring insert forms an airtight seal with the barrel to enhance sound quality.

To ensure quality and performance, Buck Gardner build, tune, and test each call one at a time by hand at their shop in Memphis, TN.

From Buck Gardner website: We stand behind our products 100% and all of our calls are backed by our Lifetime Warranty. This guarantee covers defects in materials, quality, and workmanship for as long as you own the call. We will repair or replace the call or its components at our discretion and get your call back in the field as fast as possible.

Polycarbonate is essentially bulletproof plastic, similar to Plexiglas®. Its dense composition gives it excellent acoustic qualities with a softer sound than the Acrylic, it is highly durable so very unlikely to crack when dropped, and it is affordable for both manufacturers and hunters.

Single reed calls offer a broader range of volume and tone, but they typically require better air control and correct tongue pressure on the part of the caller. Simply put, a single reed call is more versatile but requires solid mechanics. Single reed calls can normally get louder than double reed calls can.

In a nut shell:
• Louder
• More tonal range
• Better for more experienced callers