Zillions of teal




According to Texas Parks & Wildlife Department (TPWD) biologist and various hunting outfitters the blue wing teal are here en masse along the coastal prairies, marshes, and rice fields holding water.


Teal hunting season opens this Saturday, Sept 10 and continues through Sunday, Sept. 25.


“Unless some strange weather changes everything, I’d say this looks like it’ll be a good teal season,” said Mike Rezsutek, who oversees TPWD wildlife management areas and wetland programs in Jefferson, Chambers and Orange counties in southeast Texas. By ‘strange weather’, Rezsutek is referring to tropical weather coming out of the Gulf.


Good resting conditions exist all over Texas going into fall, inviting the birds to stop and feed. Also, there’s more rice out there than there has been in past years which the teal love to feed on. Rice production jumped up to at least 35,000 acres this year.


Todd Steele (Thunderbird Hunting Club) reports that the teal are looking for shallow water, no matter whether that’s mud flats, shallow water marshes, or rice fields. Hunters will see birds more evenly distributed this year, not bunched up in a handful of spots. Gene Campbell (Oyster Bayou Hunting Club) exaggerates a little when he says there are a zillion birds already here, but I think hunters get the point. The birds are plentiful. Last year the birds didn’t show up until the day before the season opener.


Teal hunting tips:


Scouting before the hunt is important. Rod Haydel (Haydel’s Game Calls) says in his experience hunting teal, they tend to skirt the edges of grass and points in a marsh. Tim Daughrity adds that marshes with an expanse of open water within the marsh are prime targets.


Shallow water, no deeper than a foot, with aquatic vegetation close by are prime resting and roosting locations. Don’t forget larger bodies of water that fit the same description – shallow water and aquatic vegetation close by.


There’s no need for a huge spread of decoys at the start of the season. Haydel advises that 12 decoys is about the right amount.


May your aim always be true, don’t forget shooting safety, and good luck tomorrow, and the rest of the teal season.
Picture credit - Brazoria NWR, Texas




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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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