Whitetail Deer Hunting Prospects Look Good




Alan Cain, the whitetail program leader for TPWD reported the statewide deer population is going to be right around 4.3 million to 4.6 million range. If you look at statewide trends, it’s slowly creeping up each year. This fall and winter will be on par with previous seasons in most whitetail hot beds across the state.

The Hill Country still has the highest estimate at about 2.6 million. There’s one particular management unit in the Llano-Mason area that has the highest deer density in the state, roughly 285 per 1,000 acres. TPWD always recommends hunters to use their tags, especially doe tags, in those areas with higher numbers. This should be another good year for hunters in terms of how much venison they can put in the freezer.

Cain noted that weather patterns from the summer of 2017 through the summer of 2018 were inconsistent, with the obvious landfall of Hurricane Harvey in August 2017 having an impact on some portions of the state deer herd. Heavy rain this fall in some parts of the state may make it difficult getting to some favorite deer hunting locations.

There wasn’t any significant reports of adult mortality or fawn mortality (as a result of Harvey). That doesn’t mean it didn’t occur, but the Deer Management Unit in the Houston area that runs east toward the Louisiana border and up into the Pineywoods did receive significant flooding as a result of the hurricane.

What it ultimately may have done is displace a lot of deer in that area and a lot of them were able to get out and get to higher ground. TPWD biologists did see a reduction in deer densities in that area but that’s due to not being able to run all of the Department’s surveys in that area.

Other areas of the state also inundated with moisture as a result of the hurricane saw differing effects from the storm. Victoria and back toward other parts of the Post Oak Savannah, even with all the moisture, still had decent deer numbers.

Deer density is still above 60 deer per 1,000 acres in those areas.
Cain thinks that this will be a good year, maybe not exceptional, but still a good year. Most places had decent range conditions this spring.There was good browse and forbs available, even if it went dormant as it got hot.

In general, across the state, Texas had good fawn crops in 2010 and 2013, so that would translate into more 5½-year-old and 8½-year-old bucks, relative to other age classes out there.

Photo: Denton County Buck, courtesy TPWD

 




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Fishing Report from TPWD (Sep. 24)

GOOD. normal stain; 85 degrees; 1.29 feet below pool. There is good topwater action early in the morning around pond weed with topwaters and frogs. Then use flukes and soft plastics stick baits along the edge of the pond weed most of the day. There are still a few groups of fish offshore, but bass are primarily scattered from 12-22 feet in roadbeds, humps and long points. Deep crankbaits are good over points and humps in 18-25 feet. Report by Marc Mitchell, Mitchell's Guide Service. Early and late topwater bites around grass lines and isolated cover on main lake and secondary points. Try frog and mouse patterns for topwater. Bass are schooling in creeks, so a hard-bodied popper should work. Bream are shallow, try small hoppers. Sand bass are schooling mid-lake. Report by Guide Alex Guthrie, Fly Fish Fork Guide Service. Lake Fork crappie fishing is heating back up as we begin to head into early fall. The black crappie are stacking up in huge numbers this week on brush piles and other structures. The bite for them is still a little finicky but small hand tied jigs swam over them or small jig heads tipped with minnows are working to get them in the boat. Still having to go thru numbers of fish to find the larger ones. The white crappie are also showing up on timber along creek channels in 18-28 feet. That bite has gotten stronger and the minnow tipped jig heads are working well on those fish. Have caught some fish on soft plastics the last few weeks. We should see the bite getting even better when water temps drop down as we begin to cool down more. Report by Jacky Wiggins, Jacky Wiggins Guide Service.

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