Deer Hunting Questions ...




This past week I received the following email from one of my Lake Hub readers. This gentleman and two of his sons enjoy hunting and hunted as guests on a family members lease, but the lease is no longer available. “We sat in blinds that were setup with feeders. We mainly hunted deer, but got a few turkeys; never saw any hogs when we wanted to hunt them.

“We would like to hunt on our own, maybe on our own lease or a public area, but since we've never done those on our own, I'm a little overwhelmed on what to do and how to start. And we do not have much extra spending cash, so we would like to get by spending as little as possible. I know hunting can get expensive very quick.”

Good questions that many hunters would like answered.

Hunting on deer leases are the easy way to hunt, which spoil Texas deer hunters. They come equipped with blinds that can be driven to, feeders filled with corn to draw the deer, and sometimes with lodging for after the hunt. But as you know, they can be expensive. In my experience with leases the price begins around $500 and goes up into the thousands. My best advice if you want to check out leases around your area is go online and see what you can find.

There are some public hunting areas that are free to hunt, or they may charge a small fee to enter the area. Examples are National Forests or other National designated wilderness areas. There are also some Texas State Parks that offer hunting, but usually you apply before the season opens with TPWD. They have only so many permits per park. The lucky hunters are drawn out the accumulated entries. Check the TPWD website (hunting) for more information on this opportunity. The National Forests are probably the best bet. Check the National Forest website for locations within your travel boundaries. Call the provided phone numbers for additional information. In East Texas, some of the logging companies open their land up at certain times for hunting. Check online for East Texas logging companies.

At any of these locations it will be what Texas deer hunters call primitive hunting ... no feeders and no stands. I personally like this kind of hunting. I like the challenge of walking in, finding tracks along an established trail and staying there for about one to two hours listening for sounds of a deer approaching. I want to keep the wind blowing to me, not at my back. Keep clear shooting lanes.

One time while hunting in Oklahoma along a logging road I had a doe come down the road, pause, check me out (I was perfectly still) and proceed down the road. It was one of the highlights of that trip. At another time while hunting whitetail in New York, I had a small herd of deer come running along a ridge toward me. Unfortunately, they were all does; only bucks could be harvested.

If you get a chance to go out over the Christmas holidays, drop me an email and let me know how the hunt went…Tom

Photo courtesy TPWD

 




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Lake Texoma

Fishing Report from TPWD (May 1)

GOOD. Water normal stain; 67 degrees; 0.33 feet below pool. Striped bass fishing is great on top waters early along rocky shorelines and sandy flats around coves. Watch for birds on the banks and fish the direction the birds are moving up and down the rocks. Live bait is still very effective fishing ledges and humps near the river channels in 35-45 feet of water. The shad spawn is on and catching will only get better. Crappie fishing is good near boat docks and on structure also using electronics to locate roaming fish in 12-15 feet of water. Glo and milk are colors of choice with a crappie nibble tip. Seeing females in the creeks 2-5 feet of water as well. Catfishing is getting better on cut shad and prepared baits anchored on ledges in 40-50 feet of water a few reels off the bottom near rocky banks. Slip cork with a cut shad down the bluffs are producing channel cats preparing to spawn as well. Bass fishing is good using top waters early, spooks or closed face glide baits and fish crawl baits later. Fish are roaming near the beds and hitting white chatter baits as well. Live shad down the bluffs are producing numbers with the occasional big fish off the rocks in 5-8 feet of water. Report by Jacob Orr, Guaranteed Guide Service Lake Texoma. Hybrid stripers are excellent with limits coming on topwaters along the bank early in the morning watching for Egrets. Then switch to swimbaits on flats and points in 10-20 feet of water. Shad are spawning along the banks. Report by John Blasingame, Adventure Texoma Outdoors.

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