Image source: Houston Chronicle
When the Trinity River, swollen from heavy spring rains, oozed over its banks along its lower reaches and spread over the adjacent landscape, as it almost annually did back when I was a teenager, we’d wait maybe a week, load the bed of the pickup with No. 2 washtubs and 20-foot “minnow” seines and head to the flooded river.
We’d wade the shallows where the swelled Trinity had inundated acres of grasses and shrubs, make drags with the seine and reap a red, tail-snapping harvest of crawfish. We easily filled three or four of the 15-gallon galvanized tubs with huge “swamp reds.”
Source: Houston Chronicle
The Louisiana Wildlife and Fisheries Commission (LWFC) adopted an amended Notice of Intent to hold a Louisiana…
The Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission have approved hunting regulations for the 2024-25 season with…
Shark Photos I’m working on some future content and looking for historic photos of great…
What if we killed the last feral hog in Texas? It's a fascinating topic and…
Fishing in the spring along the Texas coast offers exciting opportunities to catch black drum,…
The National Wildlife Health Center (NWHC) has confirmed several doves collected across Texas, including the…