yes up to 55 miles per hour
I'll assume you meant to ask "How do turkeys get on trees". Although they are not as good at it as other birds wild turkeys can fly so if they want to get into a tree they fly there.
Wild turkeys can fly so yes but they can only fly for short distance. Domestic turkeys fly only 10-20 yards . They are fattened for market , and it's even harder for them to get airborne.
Of course. Turkeys roost in trees, which they cannot climb. If you chase a turkey, it will run, but if you get too close, it will fly, just as a chicken would. Sometimes turkeys fly across roads, but most often they walk.
Domestic turkeys are bred to be so large that their ability to fly is seriously reduced. See link
Yes, a wild turkey flies very well. Wild turkeys roost in a tree at night, there will be quite a few of them in the same tree & in trees close by. The hens tend to stick together but the gobblers & jakes- (young male turkeys) fight for the right to be the breeder of the flock. All the turkeys make a special noise when they fly-up to roost & again when they fly-down in the morning. The noise is one of the ways that hunters locate where the flock is staying so they can set-up nearby the next morning to hunt the turkeys.
Depends on how many there are, Turkeys necks are easily snapable so go for the neck first. If there are more than a few, aim punches under the neck to try and dislodge organs or knock the wind out of it.
humming birds fly so fast because they are so fast
Yes. Most farmed turkeys that would show up on your table are Broad Breasted Whites. They are bred to be big and have a large breast. They are so big, they have to be butchered before they get to their full size because their legs will break under their own weight, and be artificially inseminated because they can't breed on their own. They are white in color so that dark pin feathers don't show on their skin, making a better looking cooked bird. There are however, what is called 'heritage' breeds which are very close to wild turkeys and these are generally grown by hobbyists. There are several colors available. They are a bit bigger than a wild turkey, but not as big as the broad breasted breeds. A wild turkey is about the size of a big chicken. In terms of the taste, it depends on what the turkey has been eating. The turkeys you get at the store have been eating manufactured pellets and butchered before their full weight so they don't have much fat (which makes them dry and kind of tasteless). A wild turkey likes to eat acorns and greens, and will have a much more full bodied turkey taste. Their meat is also darker because they get more exercise than a penned turkey. If you feed a domesticated turkey on a wild turkey diet, it will taste like a wild turkey.
Turkeys, no matter what their age, cannot fly.
If they fly very fast, they might not seewhere they are going
Wild turkeys are very smart but domestic turkeys are complete idiots. They will drown themselves in the rain. REALLY!! They will look up as the rain starts too fall and just stay there with there heads up as the water fills their nostrils and mouths and then they die.
Yes.