The Water Trough, August 8, 2011

Around central Texas, water is real scarce.  The stock tanks are drying up and if we could find a hoof print, there wouldn’t be any water in it because it had dried up too!  However, the water trough is attracting more wildlife, Tuesday night just past midnight, this doe looks wary and startled because of the gray fox, but neither of the animals are enemies, so the fox looks like it couldn’t be concerned.

Now, how about a quiz?   As this spike walks away from the water trough, how many deer are in the picture?  Look closely!

Wednesday morning this fox squirrel couldn’t resist gettin’ a drink.  Squirrels have a fondness for corn, acorns and pecans, but because of the drought there’s not much nut production, so it just settled for a drink.

The water trough is attracting more wildlife.  Wednesday afternoon this doe and her 2 spotted fawns stopped by for a drink, then this roadrunner thought it would wet it’s whistle.  No apparent animosity between the bird and the deer.

Early Friday morning, the 29th, a new spike showed up.  With the lack of moisture, food for deer is spotty at best and this year we are setting a record for spikes and scraggly racks.  This spike has some form to his horns, so maybe he’s just a quirk, will grow some horns next year and will survive this hunting season?

Just after midnight on August 4th, as his buddy was getting a drink, possibly a new buck showed up.  He sure doesn’t have the potbelly of the big, 6, pointer.  And, speaking of the devil, the big 6 showed up an hour later.  There’s not much food for these bucks, hence the poor antlers and added to that, we’ve never seen so many spikes!

     

The Race Was On

With no wind, calm seas and high humidity everything was real close and if you live along the Gulf of Mexico, you know exactly what that means! At sunup, as we reached the end of the Galveston Jetties, we set our course to 150 on the compass. Earlier we had stopped by our friendly, ex German submariner’s to buy some cigar minnows and were told by him that the shrimp boats could be found about 20 miles out on a course of 150. The breeze created by Bob Baugh’s boat cruising along at 35, was refreshing to Bob, Brad and I and 18 miles out, sure enough, we sighted the first shrimp boat.

Bob pulled alongside of the shrimper and the mandatory swap, beer for some chum, was made. Beer is the legal tender of choice out on the Gulf and can be a barter item for shrimp, chum and even ice. The trade made we baited up our medium weight rods, loaded with 20 pound line, a 3 foot, light wire leader and red reels, with cigar minnows purchased from our German friend, tossed out a couple of handfuls of chum, small fish culled from the boat’s night of shrimping and awaited the inevitable strikes!

They strikes weren’t long in coming. All three of us got almost simultaneous strikes, and the race was on, 3 kingfish, roaring away at full speed, the reels nearly smoking as the fish pulled out line. We gained a little line, then the kings took off again and two of the kings decided to battle it out on the top. Many splashes later we gaffed two, but kept one in the water because we only had 2 gaffs and gaffing the last one, we whacked all 3 with our “kingfish persuader”, admired the 3, 20 pounders and into the cooler with them.

We repeated this scenario two more times, long runs, splashes on top and grudging fights alongside the boat and added two more kings, 20 pounders like the first three, to our cooler, then Bob said that a person could eat just so much kingfish and we should leave these fish alone. Because, this past week, he’d heard about a new rig, 50 miles out, in about 150 foot of water, that should have some amberjack around it.

Bob figured out our new course and we headed out, the slick seas letting us make the 30, mile run in just under and hour. Soon we saw the rig on the horizon, Bob’s calculations were right on, so we pulled up to it and trolled around it a couple of times with no luck. Next, we pulled up to the rig and tied on, then let our cigar minnows out to drift in the current, then, not 5 minutes later, I had a savage strike, the fish heading south, then jumping several times. The fish, later identified as a 25 pound barracuda, put up a savage fight all the way to the boat and, trying not to hurt the fish too much, we slid the gaff into the point of its chin and hefted it aboard, a nice catch, but no eating for this one. Barracuda in southern climes, many times carry a disease, cigutera that they contract from other fish that eat the shellfish on tropical reefs, so we’d take no chances with this one.

No amberjack at this stop, so we caught several more toothy, barracudas, then with the seas still flat, we untied from the rig and headed back in. As usual, not a mile from the end of the jetties, we picked up a race, with a sleek, 30 foot inboard with, obviously, 2 big diesel engines and built for speed. Full bore we were racing when we spied a crew boat heading our way. Both little boats veered to the right, but both boats caught the edge of the crew boat’s wake, a 4, foot wave and both, slammed into it. It’s a wonder both boats weren’t destroyed, but Brad and I were tossed around the fishing area of Bob’s boat and going down, my watch, a Rolex, hit a sharp object cutting my wrist and breaking the watch band. Rolex bands aren’t cheap, even back then in the 80’s, and $200.00 later, with a new watch, band, I was ready for whatever the Gulf could bring my way, I thought.

 

The Corn Feeder, August 2, 2011

The corn feeder is set to throw corn a little after 7:00 AM, then again just after 7:00 PM.  On the 26th, the morning feed was slightly postponed when the feeder went off scaring the deer congregating around it.  One of the deer was one not seen before, a young, buck with forked horns, hopefully, he’ll grow up!

The next morning, shortly after the feeder went off, a crow decided to join the feeding festivities.  Looks like the crow is squarin’ off against the deer.  Not ten minutes later, probably the same crow, is nonchalantly feeding while the deer, including the long horn, spike are looking on.
     
Early the morning of July 28th, this coon and young 6 pointer look like they are choosing their fighting positions.  Normally both get along peacefully, but food is food!

Tropical Storm, Don, fizzled out, only dropping a inch of rain on South Padre Island and the lower Rio Grande Valley.  We had been praying that the storm would be a real wet one and would break our statewide drought, but this means that the chance of food plots looks slimmer and slimmer.  This week we’ll put another feeder up and this one will be loaded with one-fourth, high protein pellets and three-fourths, corn.  We’ll see how this works.