Early season teal




By late August and mid September, over six million teal are predicted to migrate south this year with the early migrating blue-winged teal the first to drop their landing gear and cupping their wings over lakes in Texas. Mature drakes are the first to leave breeding grounds in Saskatchewan in late summer, followed by adult hens and juveniles.

Blue-winged teal fly faster and farther than any other duck species. Texas lakes, sloughs and ponds are rest stops for the fast little birds as they wing their way to Mexico, Latin America and the Caribbean.

A 16-day statewide early teal season opens Saturday, Sept. 13 and continues through Sunday, Sept. 28. The daily bag limit on teal remains six, with a possession limit of 18.

Dave Cox www.palmettoguideservice.com, a seasoned waterfowl and fishing guide says the past several years have been a time of plenty for teal hunters. “Hunters straps have been heavy in recent years and indications are this will be another great year for the special September early teal season.” His favorite place to hunt teal, Lake Livingston is in great shape to attract and hold teal as well as other lakes that have received their share of spring and summer rains. Look for teal to invade the shorelines lush with vegetation.

Techniques for teal hunting are similar to regular season duck hunting, however a few adjustments could bring added success. Foremost is concealment. “By using a natural brush blind you are on your way to fast action on opening day,” says Cox. “While teal are not as wary as late season mallards or pintails, they have excellent eye sight and will flare from movement or shinning faces. Secondly, early season ducks are mostly dark in color. Therefore, I leave colorful mallard drake and pintail drake decoys at home, using only the darker hens. This will give your spread a more natural look. I use three dozen decoys or more, mixing in teal decoys with standard decoys. Add several motion decoys and leave an opening in your spread right in front of your blind with a couple of the little teal decoys in the middle for teasers. The teal should set down right in front of you.”

There are several good teal calls on the market that imitate the blue-winged short raspy quack. “A few short burst of raspy quacks when birds are bumping your spread should convince them to pull on in,” continues Cox. “I combine the short raspy quacks of the blue-winged teal with a peep, peep whistle sound of the green-winged teal. Be patient and bring the birds in close for select shots and clean kills.

“I expect that the early teal season on Lake Livingston and all Texas lakes will be another great one. Brush up your blinds, camo your faces and prepare for fast, fun teal hunting.




Tell us what you think!

Lake Texoma Email Updates


 

Visit our Lake Texoma Sponsors!

Lake Texoma on Social Media

 
       

Lake Texoma Current Weather Alerts

There are no active watches, warnings or advisories.

 

Lake Texoma Weather Forecast

Thursday

Chance Thunderstorms

Hi: 84

Thursday Night

Chance Thunderstorms

Lo: 75

Independence Day

Chance Thunderstorms

Hi: 87

Friday Night

Mostly Cloudy

Lo: 77

Saturday

Partly Sunny

Hi: 89

Saturday Night

Mostly Cloudy

Lo: 77

Sunday

Slight Chance Thunderstorms

Hi: 91

Sunday Night

Partly Cloudy

Lo: 77


Lake Texoma Water Level (last 30 days)


Water Level on 7/3: 619.26 (+2.26)



Lake Texoma

Fishing Report from TPWD (Jul. 2)

FAIR. Water stained; 84 degrees; 2.44 feet above pool. Striper fishing is good on ledges and humps. Fish are moving quickly on contour in 15-20 feet of water, or suspended 30 feet down on deep humps in 50-70 feet of water on live shad. Topwater baits will be hit-and-miss in the mornings and late evenings before dark. Channel and blue catfish are great on points and ledges in 25-30 feet of water using punch bait. Bigger blues are roaming deeper water flats in 50-70 feet of water, cut shad and whole gizzard shad are working. Bass fishing is good near docks and rocks on crankbaits and quick moving baits. Look for pockets of clearer water and fish to be suspended. Report by Jacob Orr, Lake Texoma, Guaranteed Guide Service. Striped bass are tough with an inconsistent bite. The flood gates have been closed and the bite should improve as the water settles. Best bite has been with live bait or trolling 20-30 feet of water. Some reports of catches anchored in deep water. Still waiting for the small threadfin shad to run midlake. Report by John Blasingame, Adventure Texoma Outdoors. Anticipate increased boater traffic this weekend as we celebrate our Nation’s Independence Day.

More Fishing Reports