GUNNING FOR UPLAND BIRDS – July/August 2021

BARE BONES HUNTING by Lou Marullo – July/August 2021
June 30, 2021
TEXAS BOATING by Lenny Rudow – July/August 2021
June 30, 2021

Getting the Best Boom for Quail, Pheasant, Dove & Chachalaca

TEXAS IS LIKE its own country.

With massive geographical boundaries and many unique cultures, Texas is as big and diverse as many nations.

For wingshooters, Texas’s hunting diversity is second to none, and it comes with a unique challenge only available within its borders.

The Texas Upland Bird Slam involves the taking of dove, quail, pheasant, and chachalaca. These birds require hunting from the far north to the Mexico border and offer opportunities from the Louisiana line to El Paso.

Let’s take a look at how, when, and where to bag these birds, and it starts with the right shotgun.

Shotgunning In Style

The CZ All-Terrain Series offers a unique shotgun in 12 and 20 gauge perfect for everything from dove to wild turkeys.

Clad in OD Green and walnut, these shotguns stand out without being ostentatious. The muted green Cerakote finish makes them ideal for fieldwork, increasing their hardiness and making them near impervious to the elements.

The stand-out feature of this series of scatterguns is a small but revolutionary addition to the ejector/extractor of the break-open variants.

To make them more ideal for use while handling dogs on a quail hunt, for example, each of the All-Terrain over/unders and side-by-sides have a set of rare earth magnets installed in their extractor or ejectors.

With these magnets in place, most modern shells are retained in the gun even when the gun is turned upside

down. Never will a dog-handler accidentally dump shells out of their gun while bending over to work with their dog.

Dove Time

Some 400,000 Texas hunters take to the field and bag somewhere in the neighborhood of five million doves beginning September 1.

With the mourning dove population alone exceeding 30 million, this state is unlike any other in terms of hunting these sporting birds.

Yes, we said “mourning doves alone.”

According to the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department (TPWD), Texas has seven species of doves and pigeons. Of these, only four (mourning dove, white-winged dove, white-tipped dove, and European collared dove) are currently hunted.

Dove hunters only need $48 to get in on thousands of acres of prime dove hunting habitat.

That’s the price of an Annual Public Hunting Permit (APH), which unlocks access to many dove-specific leases and hunting land totaling more than 900,000 acres.

Dove (and small game) leases are distributed from South Texas (Brooks County) to the Panhandle (Hansford County) and from the Beaumont region (Orange County) to far West Texas (Hudspeth County).

Around 80 percent of the acreage is located in Dallas/Ft Worth (Reg. 4), Austin/Waco (Reg. 6), Houston/Beaumont (Reg. 7), San Antonio/Corpus Christi (Reg 8).

We’ve Still Got Quail!

Texas holds the most consistent quail population in America, but even in Texas seasons can fluctuate.
(Photo: Adobe Stock)

Quail numbers are down nationwide, but South, Central, and West Texas, as well as well-managed properties in the Panhandle, still have substantial populations.

The most commonly hunted quail here is the bobwhite. A beautiful (and tasty) bird famous for flushing at the very last second, makes up most of the quail bagged in Texas.

Number two is the scaled quail, most often referred to as “blue quail” in Texas.

According to TPWD officials, scaled quail occur throughout the Chihuahuan desert and are the most common quail in the Trans Pecos.

They are also present in the Edward’s Plateau and Panhandle. These wary birds often run instead of flying in retreat and can make impressive speeds.

In the Trans-Pecos, the beautiful Gambel’s quail is present and in huntable numbers. Public land for hunting them is scarce, but Elephant Mountain Wildlife Management Area is an option.

Quail season kicks off October 30 and runs through February 27.

Chachalaca? Huh?

Texas is the only state to offer a season for chachalacas.
(Photo: Randi Mal)

The plain chachalaca typically occurs in small groups of three to five individuals. They are found in tall, thorny thickets, scrubland, and second-growth forest edge along the Gulf-Caribbean slope from the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas and Nuevo Leon, Mexico, south to Honduras and Costa Rica, according to TPWD officials.

Texas is the only state to have enough of these unique birds to offer a season, and they are available to hunt in four counties (Cameron, Hidalgo, Starr, Willacy).

Secretive and often difficult to spot in their native habitat, these unique gamebirds offer a challenging hunting experience for the outdoorsman. The upcoming season is October 30 to February 27 with a daily bag limit of five birds.

Texas Parks & Wildlife offers hunting on five units of the Las Palomas Wildlife Management Area. These include the Baird, Anacua, Carricitos, Longoria, and Tucker Units.

Finishing With Pheasants

Quality pheasant hunts are available in 37 Texas counties.
(Photo: Bernie Duhamel)

Texas has quality free-ranging, wild pheasant hunting in 37 counties in the Panhandle region.

According to TPWD records, the first pheasants in the High Plains and Northern Rolling Plains of Texas immigrated from western Oklahoma in 1939 or 1940. Various attempts at pheasant stockings have occurred at the state and private level from the Panhandle to the Gulf Coast (which used to have a season), but the Panhandle is where the birds flourish.

With a December 4 to January 2 season this year, most Texas pheasant hunting is by Panhandle area residents.

Still, there is a hardcore group of hunters who make the annual trek to get in on hunting what could be the most beautiful upland bird in the big, open spaces of the Panhandle.

 

Shotgun Diversity

CZ’S ALL-TERRAIN SERIES comes in 12- or 20-gauge and the option of 28 or 30-inch barrels, depending on the model.

Equipped with sling swivels, these shotguns are ready out of the box. Almost all models come with extended chokes.

All species of the Texas Upland Bird Slam are huntable with either 12 or 20 gauge, with the 20 being most popular with the dove and chachalaca hunters and 12 having the edge on quail and pheasants.

Upland Ultralight AT

Redhead AT

Drake AT

Bobwhite AT

Models including the following:

• CZ Bobwhite G2 All-Terrain 20 Gauge

• CZ Upland Ultralight All-Terrain 20 Gauge

• CZ Upland Ultralight All-Terrain 12 Gauge

• CZ Bobwhite G2 All-Terrain 12 Gauge

• CZ Redhead Premier All-Terrain 12 Gauge

• CZ Drake All-Terrain 20 Gauge

• CZ Drake All-Terrain 12 Gauge

• CZ 1012 All-Terrain

• CZ Redhead Premier All-Terrain 12 Gauge

• CZ Redhead Premier All-Terrain 20 Gauge

Get more details on the web here: cz-usa.com/product/cz-all-terrain-series.

 

TFG STAFF REPORT

 

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