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Archive for September, 2007

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Mexico - A Dove Hunter’s Paradise!

Sunday, September 30th, 2007

Wing-shooting in old Mexico has been a relatively well kept secret for years among die-hard Texas hunters.  Most everyone has heard about the abundance of birds and wonderful habitat that are a natural extension of our South Texas region.  What keeps many out, among other things, is the perceived hassle and cost of the undertaking itself.  Fortunately, for those of us who know how to overcome the obstacles, it is a bird hunters dream and an annual sabbatical that we try to make every year.

Dove Hunting in Mexico

This year’s trip was for Dove in the northern state of Tamaulipas, Mexico where local farmers work the grain fields in the lush San Fernando Valley.  Our group of hunters were the guests of a private lodge maintained and operated by a small group of Texas outdoorsmen who have been doing this for over four decades.  As a matter of fact, Texas artist John Cowan painted a picture of this same area in his picture Second Wave, and he describes it very well in the John P. Cowan, A Texas Treasure book.  Cowan writes of the “Mexican Whitewings” and their migratory habits driven by food and weather.  He describes the scene perfectly with his description of the fields, distant mountains and the “bird boys” who who turned out for us as well.

A dove hunt in Mexico has several unique attributes that are hard to duplicate back in the United States.  The obvious one is the sheer abundance of birds and the generous limits of the Mexican government.  The other is the ambiance of rural low lying mountain ranges sprawling out into farmlands that make the land uniquely beautiful.  Finally, its the pleasure of hunting with the Mexican people who are amazingly resilient and extremely hard working.  Something that serves them well when it comes to finding downed doves in the desert scrub of the area.  The dove season here starts around August and runs through October for whitewing and February for mourning dove.  Each hunter may purchase up to two permits for a limit of 210 birds per hunter.  To bring your own gun, your permit must be completely filled out and include the exact serial numbers of each gun.  It is not advised to take cartridges over the boarder but to purchase them at your destination. 

A typical hunting trip here lasts several days with two hunts a day at various locations.  Our hunts over three days ranged from hunting low-lying hills similar to those found in the Texas Hill Country to desert scrub along grain fields near the Rio Concho.  We timed both our morning and afternoon hunts to arrive around an hour prior to the bird’s daily flight patterns.  Like clockwork, they would start flying in the morning just as the sun peeked its rim above the earth’s and repeat the process in the late afternoon.  A typical shoot yields the average shooter around thirty birds and, depending on the situation, can yield any combination of whitewing or mourning dove.  Our hunt this year was almost exclusively whitewing and we had above average shooting since we missed the hurricanes that came through the area this season.

To hunt Mexico, it is advisable to work with a reputable outfitter who can help you with the planning and paperwork required of such a trip.  Despite the process being somewhat tedious, the overall experience is one that just can not be ignored since it offers great hunting and is relatively easy to get to from our state.  I have driven almost as much to shoot a twelve bird limit in South Texas.  Now, we have hundreds of birds for the table the rest of the year.

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Posted in Hunting - Upland | No Comments »

Academy Sports & Outdoors has a winner with their outdoors show

Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

You gotta love technology.  I remember as a kid being the youngest and having to get up and change the channel by hand for my dad and brothers.  Being the human remote control on college football days was enough to give you finger cramps by dinner time.  Fast forward to today and you have the internet for watching the show of your choice without commercial interruption and the ability to playback, freeze and fast forward.  Recently, I had a chance to watch some of the online episodes of the Academy Outdoors Show on my laptop.  Academy is smart to put this content on their website for more than the obvious reasons of advertising their already popular brand.  The popularity of web-based video content has been growing tremendously.  One need not look further than YouTube as an example and Academy is ahead of the competition with this one.

The Academy Outdoors show is a first rate program hosted by BASS Fishing Circuit Pro, Chad Brauer, and features incredible photography and a variety of hunting and fishing programming.  The programs run commercial free online and last about twenty minutes each.  You can also see them regularly on the Outdoor Channel from your television.  From Spring Turkey hunting in Tennessee to catching trout and redfish in south Texas, the Academy Outdoors Show has something for everyone.  Go see for yourself!

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Posted in Hunting - Advocacy, Hunting - Deer, Hunting - Exotics, Hunting - General, Hunting - Hog, Hunting - Upland, Hunting - Waterfowl, Wildlife, Youth Outdoors | No Comments »

Its Forty and Out for Teal

Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

Thirty or so minutes after shooting time and three of us are sitting in the blind with arms folded across our laps.  Beside us are four Teal ducks representing two of the three North American species to migrate south each fall.  In Texas, these would either be Green-winged or Blue-winged Teal.  Their Cinnamon Teal brethren rarely make their southerly migration through Texas, opting for a more westerly route along the Pacific coast flyway. With fifteen ducks in the blind, we are waiting for the sixteenth candidate to appear over our decoys so the fourth hunter in our party can round out a full limit.  In typical duck hunting fashion, someone sitting in the lucky part of the blind got more shots off than the other guy and thus has his limit first.  Today, the slowest seat in the house happened to be in the interior of the blind, second from the left end as you look out over the decoys.

Teal Banking over Decoys

As experienced and passionate waterfowl hunters, this does not pose a problem or a bragging contest for those with their limits.  Although it does not eliminate the obligatory ribbing or commentary on poor shooting, if that was the case.  On the contrary, everyone is respectful of the fact that they just happened to be on the side of the blind where the ducks decided to come into the decoy spread.  In a four-man blind situation, it is common eitiquette, and just plain safe, to shoot only those ducks within your “quadrant” of the firing zone.  Starting from left to right as you look out of the blind, the guy on the left looks for and shoots ducks as they come into the decoys at “nine o’clock” to eleven o’clock.  The two middle guys get eleven to one o’clock and the right guy gets the one to three o’clock on the imaginary grid.  If you get a decent group of ducks to come in, the outside guys wait for the ducks to enter the middle quadrant so that everyone gets a shot and, on singles, the middle guys alternate.  The problem is the ducks do not always cooperate.  Today was just one of those days for the second slot shooter who happened to be next to me on my right - me being the left-end hunter.

I, for one, appreciate a patient gun.  I find it more satisfying to pick good shots and therefore insure a swift dispatch of the bird than see a rushed shot lead to a lost cripple. And, I appreciate those who practice the same restraint.  In this case, my immediate neighbor had done just that.  He waited for the right shots and as a result got to enjoy watching the ducks work their way into the decoys and admire the other hunters make shots in the process.  If there were a golfer’s par equivalent in duck hunting, it would probably be a ratio of one shell per bird harvested.  Since most golfers do not shoot par, a respectable ratio of shells shot to birds harvested would probably be 1.5 to one.  Anything north of two per bird is probably grounds for taking a little more time at the range or practicing some patience on the trigger. 

So, at about forty minutes after shooting time, our last hunter sees a single teal banking in from right to left as he approaches the decoys.  He leans forward on the bench, eyes just above the brushy camouflague of the blind.  The rest of us do the same except with guns empty and held low behind the cover.  As if on cue, the duck cups his wings right in the middle of the two group decoy spread in front of us and our last shooter pops up with one fluid motion, aims, and dispatches the final bird for our limit.  Forty minutes and done.  Not a particularly fast Teal hunt but those are not always the best anyways.  I am of the opinion that having some singles mixed in with a few good groups makes for a better hunt and stretches things out a bit.  Today was exactly that.

Teal retrieved

As we made our way back to our staging area, other groups of hunters from different ponds began to show up.  Leaning against an ATV or sitting on the tailgate of a truck, the men start to tell stories of this shot and that.  One guy got a double out of group, another guy missed a fully-cupped teal ten yards away.  And so goes the jawing back and forth while I start to put my gear away.  I looked in my shell bag and pulled out my box of 12 gauge #4’s and took note of the number of shots I took for the morning.  Looks like I am perilously close to needing some range time next week, or maybe a little more patience.

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Posted in Hunting - Waterfowl | No Comments »

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