Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I actually found out my brother in law used to have a lease. They got out of it because the time, money, and outcomes weren’t worth it. It sounds like I just need to go the route of doing paid hunts if I want to go down there.I’ve been out of the lease game for 8 years now, but expect $15/acre for a mediocre lease that probably has too many people on it and a chance at a 130 class buck. It may or may not have a camp house or utilities f or campers. To get into a quality lease you are looking at $22-$25/acre and up.
There are some stupidly expensive l,eases but they are usually game rich, with whitetail, exotics, turkeys, dove and pigs. And you will likely have a respectable chance at a 150+ whitetail. They usually have nice accommodations like a ranch house or cabin plus hookups for campers.
Bag limits vary by county and whether or not the ranch is under a state regulated management program.
Feeding is mandatory (except maybe in east Texas) so make sure you are ok with that and figure that cost in.
It’s becoming ridiculously expensive to hunt in Texas. Figuring travel, blinds, feed and other expenses we used to spend on average $6k per year to be on a lease where the largest buck I ever shot there in 8 years was 131”.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro
I will admit, I miss having a lease to go to with year round access and what not. But the cost, the travel (minimum 4 hour drive from any metro area to get a decent one) and most of all the man drama that can come with them I absolutely do not miss.I actually found out my brother in law used to have a lease. They got out of it because the time, money, and outcomes weren’t worth it. It sounds like I just need to go the route of doing paid hunts if I want to go down there.
The man drama that can happen cannot be understated.I will admit, I miss having a lease to go to with year round access and what not. But the cost, the travel (minimum 4 hour drive from any metro area to get a decent one) and most of all the man drama that can come with them I absolutely do not miss.
Texas leases are its own thing that makes zero sense to most.
You have to find a lease. This is harder than it seems. Leases are kept quiet and is usually invite only. Very few leases are going to be advertised in public.
Most leases you are paying "by the gun." This does not typically allow you to hunt the entire acerage that you are leasing, but rather a specific spot that you may or may not get to choose.
Blinds and feeders and cameras are basically mandatory.
The quality of the hunting is ranch dependent. You may have two properties in the highest B&C buck producing county, one might be loaded with absolute studs and the other may have almost no deer.
No matter how good the lease is, dont expect to stay more than a few years. Most of the ranch owners are in their later years. They will pass away, leave it to their kids, and they will sell it immediately- leaving you shit out of luck with a blind the size of a cabin and a feeder you need to figure out what to do with.
But they can be a ton of fun! Sure guys talk down on the style of hunting, but it is very nice to gingerly walk to a tower blind with a thermos full of coffee and watch the day unfold.
It’s absolutely pathetic.The man drama that can happen cannot be understated.