Archive for the 'Hunting' Category

TP&W TV–Themed Shows

Monday, October 6th, 2008

Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife

Texas Parks and Wildlife Television gets thematic in October. Production Supervisor, Don Cash, explains.

The first show in October deals with bats. Where to go see bats, and the monetary value that bats have. One of the shows is a fishing show. We go to the Texas coast, and we feature a fishing guide up at lake Fork, a guy named Brian Duplechain, who is just a great guy, and a great guide.

One day Butch Ray called and said, I’ve got a guide trip. Shore enough, and I jumped on that opportunity. The first cast that morning, my customer had a backlash; the second cast he caught an eight and a half pounder. He caught a big fish. That made me a guide.

Another one of our theme shows has to do with hunting. One of the stories is about a dog named call and his trainer Linda Palmer, and it’s just a great story about how she takes this dog from three months all the way up to a year. It’s a story about the relationship between the trainer and the dog.

He watched the whole thing, made sure everything was recorded in his brain, brought the bird in, and then, of course, went to get the other one.

So, if you’ve got an interest in hunting, or fishing, or bats, you’ve got a whole show that you can look at and really get in depth with it.

Thanks Don. Find a list of stations that air the series, at passporttotexas.org.

That’s our show for today…we record our series at the Production Block studios in Austin, Texas.

For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.

Preparing for Hunting Season

Friday, August 29th, 2008

Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife and the Sport Fish and Wildlife Restoration Program

Dove season ushers in the fall hunting season. The question is: will you be ready?

Those hunters need to be thinking about some primary things that deal with safety.

Terry Erwin oversees Hunter Education programs at Texas Parks and Wildlife.

They need to make sure they have their hunter education class completed; they need to make sure those firearms are in good, operable condition; and one of the most important things is to get out there in the field and practice.

And Erwin says dove and quail hunters would do well to get in some practice with sporting clays, because nothing is more frustrating to a hunter than to spend a day in the field with only missed shots to show for it.

Sporting clays typically simulates the shooting scenarios that you’ll find in the dove field, or out in the quail fields. So, take advantage of this time and get out there an practice.

Erwin also offers some sobering advice to hunters.

And don’t forget. It’s really hot out there this time of the year. Keep hydrated. Keep the liquids flowing. But remember, don’t drink that alcohol.

That’s our show for today…supported by the Sport Fish and Wildlife Restoration Program. Working to increase fishing and hunting in Texas.

For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.

Big Time Texas Hunts, 1

Monday, August 18th, 2008

Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife and the Wildlife Restoration Program

Big Time Texas Hunts offers hunters the chance to win one of seven exclusive hunting trips.

Big Time Texas Hunts is a fundraising effort to generate money to provide additional public hunting opportunities and to fund wildlife research and conservation efforts throughout Texas.

Linda Campbell is Program Director of the Private Lands and Public Hunting Program. The entry fee is $10 or $9 when you purchase an entry online!

This will be our twelfth year. We’ve been very successful with this program—it has grown—and we’ve generated over two million dollars in revenue for wildlife conservation.

For your entry fee you’ll have a chance to win a hunt of a lifetime on some of the finest private ranches and prime wildlife management areas in Texas

And we offer some awesome packages here, with big game packages, upland bird hunting, waterfowl, gator. So, we’ve got a lot of different options here, and even if you don’t win your money goes to support the work of the wildlife division, both in research, management, restoration of bighorn sheep, for example, and enhancement of our public hunting opportunities throughout the state.

Find a link to Big Time Texas Hunts at passporttotexas.org.

That’s our show… with support from the Wildlife restoration program…For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.

Licenses

Tuesday, August 12th, 2008

Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife and the Wildlife Restoration Program

Hunting and fishing licenses for the 2008-2009 seasons go on sale statewide this month.

Well, the licenses go on sale for the new year, August 15th, And I would advise folks to buy early. The new season—the dove season—will be right around the corner.

Tom Newton, who manages licensing at Texas Parks and Wildlife, says there’s good news for license buyers.

For the first time in quite a few years we haven’t changed things up much, and it’s pretty much the same as it was last year.

The most recent changes to licenses happened last year.

We had a license called the special resident hunting license that encompassed seniors and youth. We split that license into two, so that each group has its own separate license. The other is that we have consolidated all of our temporary fishing licenses into just a one-day license that you can buy multiples of. So, we simplified that, and we’ve had a very good response form our constituents.

Buy licenses online at 17-hundred retailers statewide, at state parks, game warden offices and TPWD HQ.

That’s our show…with support from the Wildlife restoration program…working to increase shooting and hunting opportunities in Texas.

For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti

Hunting Licenses go on Sale

Monday, August 11th, 2008

Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife and the Wildlife Restoration Program

It’s August: time to renew hunting and fishing licenses.

The licenses are effective beginning September first, but they actually go on sale August 15th.

Tom Newton manages licensing at Texas Parks and Wildlife.

The fishing is broken down into saltwater or freshwater, or what we call an all-water, which covers both. There’s a couple of different hunting licenses, which is your standard deer hunters, or turkey hunters, or alligator hunters. With the hunting license you have to purchase a couple of stamps. If you’re a bird hunter you’ll need the upland game bird stamp and the federal duck stamp.

The best license to buy — if you plan on hunting and fishing — is the Super Combo.

Which encompasses everything: All the stamps, all of your hunting options, all of your fishing options. The only thing you need in addition to that is your federal duck stamp. So, the Super Combo – at sixty-four dollars – is the best priced license. And, like I say, you buy that, you need nothing else for the whole year.

Buy your licenses early and avoid the rush. They’re available online and at 17-hundred agents statewide.

All of our parks sell licenses. All of our law enforcement sells licenses as we do here at Headquarters.

That’s our show…with support from the Wildlife restoration program…working to increase shooting and hunting opportunities in Texas

For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti