Saw 10-12 in East Colorado County earlier!
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
East Texas quail, when and where did you last see any?
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by GarGuy View PostHouston Co. I grew up with quail whistling in the spring. We always had coveys on our place. About 1992, they were just suddenly gone.
Used to have a covey of about 12-15 hang around the house and a few loose coveys down along a creek.
I was shooting my bow one day(about '82 or so) and covey came flying into a Redbud tree I had. More like a bush, right beside me. Then I heard a hawk screech and knew why.
Haven't seem em in a long, long time.
Comment
-
I heard a couple whistling last Fall out on the prairie here in Liberty County... Couldn't believe my ears. They were down in my pasture behind the house, but I didn't see 'em. Heard 'em off and on throughout most of the Winter, but haven't heard any this Spring... I was hoping they made it, but odds were stacked against 'em here with all the yotes, free roaming dogs/strays, and millions on coons...
Comment
-
There’s many reasons the quail population has plummeted. Eye worms Are the biggest culprit. Raptors are #2, most all rural people used to raise chickens so they kept the raptors numbers down. During the fur boom the trappers kept the nest raiders at bay. Tens of thousands of coons, skunks,possums where caught each year. People say habitat change, but i know ranches covering many square miles that haven’t changed in the last 50 years. Quail are prolific breeders, but not able to overcome disease and predation.
Comment
-
Originally posted by RS3 View PostMy dad and grandad guided quail and woodcock hunters in smith and van zandt county in the 70’s and 80’s. I killed some in 88 but it wasn’t long after that the quail numbers tanked. According to my old man house cats, horse farms and coastal Bermuda grass were the main culprits of the decline in numbers.
We also had a ton of Horny Toads in the sand fields. We would catch a few and keep them in a shoebox for a few hours then turn them back to catch another day. Big ones too, size of the palm of a grown man's hand
Comment
-
Originally posted by Ætheling View PostI saw on the TPWD show that ground nesting birds were getting wiped out by the hog explosion. They cover every bit if ground and can sniff out eggs. It was in context to Turkey but stands to reason other ground laying birds would meet the same fate.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Comment
-
Originally posted by Drycreek3189 View PostHogs are useless vermin and one day they will outnumber deer in lots of areas. They may already.
Well with the coming recession/depression maybe those numbers will decrease a little lol. Knowing our govt though the FDA and USDA will have people starving in the streets while free meat runs rampant through the woods lmao.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Comment
Comment