Texas Draw hunts have bad odds. If you live in Texas they are a local reprieve from hunting leases. Or in the case of folks that do not have the cash to do a hunting lease, this might be their only option.
I apply every year for the hunts I feel are worth it. I am not going to name hunts. I have been drawn twice in 5 years. I know people that have never been drawn, that have been applying for over 15 years. Both these hunts are what most would consider to be low grade hunts. One was feral pig and the other was javelina.
Non-residents and residents have the same odds. There is a points system that you are 15 or 20 years behind.
If you draw you have to buy a Texas hunting license, and a pay for the fee for the drawing. I think paid $75-150 for the javelina hunt. I do not remember the cost of the hog hunt. No one killed anything on the hog hunt, the javelina hunt about 8 people out of 14 tagged out.
The only hunts that I think are worth doing are the very few guided hunts.
The raffle hunts have similar odds to the draw hunts. Similar to the way most Western high quality high demand hunts work. Like bighorn sheep. You can probably win a raffle tag before you will ever draw a hunt.
Lastly, I have heard of people pulling into camp on the WMA and the biologist is standing there in the cooler with 3 dead bucks hanging in the cooler, that they killed. The WMA biologist have almost a carte blanche hunting license for the wildlife on the place.
My last hunt was on the Elephant Mountain WMA south of Alpine. This was the last hunt of the year before the helicopter mishap that claimed the lives of two of the WMA biologist, a TPWD veterinarian/pilot. It was kind of a shit show. They use it for cattle grazing, so you are fighting the cattle on every stalk.
https://abc13.com/helicopter-crash-...nd-wildlife-employees-3-workers-dead/6362674/
So to recap:
1. Huge points scheme you are 15-20 years behind.
2. Low odds of draw.
3. Quality of hunts is heavily over sold.