Dove baiting in Texas
#1
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Waller, Texas
Posts: 75
Dove baiting in Texas
Ok, I've come across some that I've been given full access to for dove hunting. Hunted there last year and it wasn't bad hunting. Anyway, I've heard of people putting down Milo a month or so before season to get the birds more interested in the field. Anyone know the laws of this can fill me in? I've read about places in Texas that have Milo feeders. I know I can't hunt over baited fields so don't respond if thats all you want to tell me.
#2
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Waller, Texas
Posts: 75
RE: Dove baiting in Texas
Ok, I've answered my own question with a little research...... Unless it's grown in the field it basically can't be there. Once removed, harvested, it can't be scattered.
Anyway, I'm not wanting to bait, but someone else does before the season. I'd rather just mow parts of the field and be done with it.
Anyway, I'm not wanting to bait, but someone else does before the season. I'd rather just mow parts of the field and be done with it.
#5
Thread Starter
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Waller, Texas
Posts: 75
RE: Dove baiting in Texas
Yea, I gottcha. Too bad the 300 acres isn't really used for much of anything than cattle. There's a field fenced off for watermelon and some other vege, but that's it. There's plent of goat weed in the South East corner. Recommend cutting part of it down?? Or leave?? It gets to about waist to chest high around dove season....
#8
RE: Dove baiting in Texas
Look for either wheat or wild marijuana fields in addition to sunflowers. I know the doves in Kansas will go crazy for either one. There was one particular pond that had tonnes of wild marijuana growing around it. The doves came their in droves. We nicknamed the pond "party pond"
#10
RE: Dove baiting in Texas
They like the goat weed and croton too. Croton is their favorite. Last year most of the birds we took were full of wheat and croton.
If you have them now, you'll likely have them when the season comes. If you have them coming through now you'll likely have them throughout the season. Any native seed producing grasses or plants or crops are preferred....
They feast on deer corn in December.
Standing crop okay. Must be two weeks after the cut date on the crop before the field is hunted, unless the rule has changed.
Whack 'em and stack 'em
If you have them now, you'll likely have them when the season comes. If you have them coming through now you'll likely have them throughout the season. Any native seed producing grasses or plants or crops are preferred....
They feast on deer corn in December.
Standing crop okay. Must be two weeks after the cut date on the crop before the field is hunted, unless the rule has changed.
Whack 'em and stack 'em