Prepare for the Season with Hunter Ed
This is Passport to Texas
Being a successful hunter begins with hunter education.
Anybody who handles firearms or goes hunting or practices shooting sports should take hunter education.
Hunter education is mandatory for those born on or after September 2, 1971. Steve Hall oversees the program at Parks and Wildlife. The course both prepares hunters for the season, and keeps them in good standing with the law.
The number one ticket we write is for no hunter’s education.
Andrew Alexander is a Texas Game Warden out of Bastrop County.
We write a lot of those [citations]. And the main thing we want there is—we don’t want them to pay a fine. We want them to take the course. They have 90 days to take the course and get their certification. Show proof to the judge, and then that citation will be dismissed.
The Texas Hunter Education program is primarily focuses on younger hunters, that’s not true of all states, which is important to understand if you hunt outside of Texas.
All fifty states require hunter education. We’re reciprocal with all of those states. And the ones that get us the most are the Colorado bound hunters who have to take it [if they’re born] on or after January 1, 1949. So, we get a lot of adults in our class that have it to have it to hunt in Colorado that may not need to have it to hunt in Texas.
Find hunter education information on the Texas Parks and Wildlife website.
The Wildlife Restoration Program Supports our series.
For Texas Parks and Wildlife, I’m Cecilia Nasti.