Persinaly id stay away from that call i know 4 ppl that have it.. and not one person can make it sound... including me..
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If money is no object, get a Sean Mann. If I ever lost mine, I don't think I'd hesitate for a second to grab another.... despite the price.
As for making a call sound good / work well.... it's probably 90% practice. The number of times I've been driving down the highway and blowing my calls is a lot. Spend the time and I'm sure any call will sound good.
Nimkii game calls. He's local and builds awesome custom calls. Reasonably priced and you won't have to upgrade when you get sick of the crappy poly carb call you buy to start on.
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X2 here... Read some great reviews about but I'm not happy with it.
Also have a Tim Grounds Poly Carb, decent but not worth the price I think. Of the lower priced calls I really like Buck Gardner's Canada Hammer, raspy and responsive. Although not as versatile, I find myself falling back to my old standby, the Big River Goose Flute.
I learned on a goozilla, works good for me, just took lots of practice, as with any.... Now I have a Samuel Game calls acrylic, sounds much more "goosey" but the old goozilla is still on the lanynard and still gets used occasionally..
buy a lower end call from a company that only makes calls. ie Zink, GK, Grounds, Capital etc. their reputation is on the line with every call they make
Buck Gardner "Canada Hammer" was my first goose call. I found it very easy to blow, and brought tons of Geese in using it. It also came with a DVD. I believe at the time it came with a duck call as well. The duck call was crap, sounded like a kazoo, but the Canada Hammer is a good call, and anyone that is trying to learn, I recommend it.
W.