Hunting
in Tom Green 'win-win'
By
JOHN BOYD, Staff Writer
October 29, 2005
Tom
Green County lies on the cusp of the state's best whitetail deer-hunting
regions.
The
Edwards Plateau, which curves to the county's south and encompasses much of
what is known as Central Texas, produced both the highest number of kills
and highest hunter success rate during the 2004 season.
South Texas also had a high hunter success rate, and those successes were
big. Of the 14 Texas bucks killed in 2004 that qualified for Boone &
Crockett ''monster buck'' status, 11 were killed in a seven-county area near
the Mexico border.
So
where does that leave Tom Green County, just outside the boundaries of both?
''Those transition zones tend to get the best of both worlds,'' said Mitch
Lockwood, director of the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department's whitetail
program. ''It's really a win-win.''
Rather than focusing on any one region for whitetail hunting, Lockwood
recommends looking at a prospective hunting land's wildlife management
program. A truly big buck takes three things, Lockwood said - age,
genetics and nutrition.
South Texas landowners make sure their whitetail have all three, which is
why the region has long led the big buck category. Whitetails love foraging
on the area's leaves and twigs, said Texas Cooperative Extension wildlife
specialist Dale Rollins.
Perhaps surprisingly, many South Texas counties allow hunters to harvest
more bucks than in other areas - three per season rather than the standard
two.
Landowners in South Texas have protected their bounty from higher harvest
rates, however, by limiting lessees to only one or two bucks on private
lands. Often, it's the older, bigger, more cagey bucks that lie low and stay
out of a rifle's crosshairs, bettering the gene pool the next mating season.
Increased focus on game management and the near-eradication of predators
have led to an increase in big bucks in the Hill Country and Central Texas
portions of the
Edwards Plateau, as well. High deer populations haven't been entirely
positive, though.
Lockwood, like many wildlife experts, believes high populations will choke
out long-term growth in the region as food scarcity becomes a larger
problem. Lockwood
advises any hunter who finds a doe in his or her scope and a free tag to
spare to take the shot.
''We've got to get those harvests up,'' he said.