Weatherford Democrat

Outdoors

February 17, 2007

Tough quail season ends with whimper

“Sadie! Over!”

For the 200th time, the willing Shorthair switched directions and circled back to the right, probing each weedy pocket of brush, still looking for the bobwhite quail we’d hoped to find.

And hope was fading fast.

We’d walked several miles of prime Rolling Plains range land during the day, trying to catch the last glimmer of hope to salvage the fading quail season.

Quail hunts come in two varieties.

There are those days when the first covey is close to the truck, the dogs are pointing before you’ve loaded the shotgun, and there are enough coveys that you don’t even bother following the singles.

Those are the days that quail men live for.

Then there are the others, when it seems a giant vacuum has sucked every quail out of the fields, when you begin to wonder if you have forgotten how to hunt quail or maybe or the old dog has lost her nose.

We’d found two coveys in half a day. Both less than a dozen birds. I managed to scratch two quail from the first. On the second I flat blew it, and called the dog off what I thought was a false point….until the birds flushed out of range.

We were headed back to the truck, the sun not set, but losing intensity fast.

And then she did the most beautiful thing a pointer can do. In mid-stride she switched back on herself and froze in that head-down, nose-up poise that screams “QUAIL!”

She was nosed into the edge of a small ditch, just a couple of feet wide, thick with weeds the cows had missed.

When I stepped past her nose, the beautiful sound of quail wings buzzed through the air.

But just three bobwhites erupted from the ditch,

The shotgun was tracking the closest, but instead of slapping the trigger I dropped the muzzle and eased the safety back on.

“Last of that covey,” I whispered to the puzzled dog. “Better leave some for next year Sadie. Let’s go home.”

***

Texas quail season ends Feb. 25 and for most of the state, it can’t come too soon. The combination of lingering drought and reduced habitat has left the little game birds no place to hide (or nest). As a result, Texas bobwhite populations are dramatically lower than just a couple of years ago.

Most of the best quail country in Texas (which means the world) still provides large dense stands of wild bunch grasses that the birds prefer for nesting. Droughts not only stop new growth, but turn hungry cattle onto the older stuff. Quail can’t nest in a parking lot and a lot of once prime quail country last year was grazed down to near-asphalt conditions.

The longer drought continues, the less cover remains and the smaller the number of remaining bobwhites to rebuild the population again when conditions improve. While we’ll almost certainly have “up” quail years again, it may be two or three years, with favorable conditions, before the birds can rebuild their numbers. And it might be a decade before we see quail numbers like those of just two seasons ago.

***

Quail management is getting a lot more attention and Texas Parks and Wildlife and the Texas Quail Conservation Initiative, a recovery plan developed by a consortium of wildlife experts and quail stakeholders, can provide advice and tools for landowners.

TPWD’s new Managed Lands Gamebird Program can provide free wildlife biologists and hands-on advice for landowners. This includes tips on Federal funding for some conservation programs.

For more information call 1-800-792-1112.

There’s also a new comprehensive book, “Texas Quails” that provides detail information from dozens of quail experts on each of the four Texas quail species. It’s available from Texas A&M; University Press.

n

Leschper’s outdoor column appears weekly in newspapers throughout Texas. Email him at lee.leschper@yahoo.com.

Text Only
Outdoors
  • Doris Mildred Emmons

    March 16, 2010

  • Just as fun, less polluting: new boats help keep waterways green If you hop in a boat this summer to take in a bit of nature, consider this: A few hours in a motorboat could be as polluting as tens of thousands of miles in a car.

    July 13, 2007

  • 'Best Remudas' deserves an award all it’s own Jim Jennings put his quarter horse expertise to work in his new book, “Best Remudas, Quality Quarter Horses.”American Quarter Horse Association (AQHA) annually presents the Best Remuda Award.

    Jennings’ book showcases these award-winning ranches in moving detail.

    July 11, 2007

  • Waterfalls of the West MENLO PARK, Calif. (AP) — Niagara Falls, located on the border of New York and Ontario, is probably North America’s most famous waterfall.

    But there are plenty of waterfalls out West worth visiting as the weather warms up. The April issue of Sunset magazine —http://www.sunsetmagazine.com — recommends 10 of them. Note that while some are a short walk from a parking lot, others require a well-planned hike.

    April 13, 2007

  • Budget cuts mean job losses for wildlife refuges WASHINGTON — Faced with a $2.5 billion budget shortfall, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is eliminating hundreds of jobs, cutting back programs and leaving more than 200 national wildlife refuges unstaffed.

    March 23, 2007

  • Instead of candy, give a manatee this Easter Helping to save endangered manatees has become a very popular gift alternative at Easter and other special occasions throughout the year.

    March 23, 2007

  • Will Texas’ Big Thicket wilderness give up the elusive ivory-billed woodpecker? BIG THICKET NATIONAL PRESERVE — Corinne Campbell stuffs her gear in waterproof sacks and stuffs them and herself into a tiny circular cutout that marks the seat in her green kayak.

    March 23, 2007

  • Winter nights great for creating These cold and dark months can bring out the closet artisan in even the most ham-handed, color-blind of us.

    While there’s still some cold weather fishing looming, right now I find myself more dedicated to making new toys for the year’s coming adventures.

    Hardly artwork, my creations are really implements for some future hunting adventure.

    March 3, 2007

  • Anglers, hunters still paying for conservation When I lived in South Texas, I used to hunt a bit with a sometimes-taxidermist who wrote the book on free rides.

    He could never take his own vehicle but never contributed to fill the tank with gas. Never remembered to bring lunch, but was quick to “share” what the rest of us had brought. Never remembered a cooler, but always had the first and last drink.

    He loved the trips, but never could see to pay his way.

    Come to think of it, I’m not sure why we kept taking him along!

    February 25, 2007

  • Tough quail season ends with whimper “Sadie! Over!”

    For the 200th time, the willing Shorthair switched directions and circled back to the right, probing each weedy pocket of brush, still looking for the bobwhite quail we’d hoped to find.

    And hope was fading fast.

    February 17, 2007

Top News
House Ads
AP Video
Beryl Makes Landfall on Florida Coast Service Dogs Help Wash. Soldiers Battling PTSD Raw Video: Heckler Bursts in on Blair Testimony Japan Farmers Plant, Seek Radiation-free Rice UN Blames Syrian Forces for Shelling Houla Raw Video: Gay Protest Blocked in Moscow Vatican in Chaos After Butler Arrested for Leaks Jimmy Carter Endorses Egypt's Election Results Biden Addresses West Point Graduating Class Dozens of Children Killed in New Syria Attack Raw Video: Activists Allege Massacre in Syria NJ Man Charged With Murder in Death of Patz Support, Fun for Kids of Fallen Soldiers at Camp Fugitive Penguin Caught, Returned to Aquarium 50 Years Later, Underground Fire Still Burning Light Show Transforms Sydney Opera House Raw Video: Unruly Passenger Restrained in Miami Raw Video: Robber Uses Drive-thru Window Raw Video: Dragon Arrives at Space Station Calif.'s Coronado Named Nation's Best Beach
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
Poll

The Air Force Academy recently graduated their first openly gay cadets. What does this signify?

Nothing. There have always been gay cadets, they just haven't been open.
A step backward. Sexual orientation issues shouldn't be a part of the military.
A step forward. The military needs to be open to people of all backgrounds.
No opinion.
     View Results