Carter county game warden
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Bud Cramer Jr - Tishomingo - Chad Strang - Moore - Casey Young - Sulphur - Mark Walker - Watonga - Cobb - Mike Carroll - Lawton - James Edwards - Elk City - David Smith - Hobart - Ben Bickerstaff - Cherokee - Max Crocker - Guymon - Follow Us:. Google Translate. To his chagrin, I found one of the few flint points in my possession, an almost complete knife blade. Not only did he have to live with that, but also the buffalo skull he "invited" me to find in a creek we were working on later that summer.
He has always been a good sport about it all. Terry has earned the respect of the people of Woods County. Not only does he have a winning personality, but always treats his lawbreakers the same. He is one of few old school individuals that greets you and Sir or Ma'am as a common greeting.
Many of his landowners will call upon him in their time of need because he has been the one to sit in their kitchen and drink coffee with them and get to know them personally. After 24 years in Woods County, there are few law enforcement officers that are as well known or respected. Both of them were recently awarded their year pins. Congratulations, Terry on this award, you have earned it over your 27 years of service. Every year, eight Game Wardens are nominated for the honor of Game Warden of the year.
This is a oneman honor but the others still need the recognition they deserve. These guys are more than Game Wardens. They have outside interests and are involved with their families and communities as well.
He is an avid bowhunter for big game including deer, elk and bear. He is a bowfisherman as well. He has participated in several tournaments around the country. Mote also enjoys Ultimate Fighting contests. Whooping cranes are snowy white with black tips at either end of a 7- to 8-foot wingspan.
In Wisconsin, opponents of a state bill that would open a sandhill crane hunting season are pointing to the shooting deaths of the four whooping cranes in Oklahoma as why it should not be legalized. And in an instant four birds are gone forever. Whooping cranes migrate through Oklahoma on their way to wintering grounds along the coastal marshes of south Texas, the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge. In the past, whooping cranes have been spotted at Lake Hefner in Oklahoma City, but their main migration path is primarily west of the Oklahoma City area through western Oklahoma.
More: Do the dead stick drift: How to catch big stripers in the winter on Lake Texoma. Whooping cranes were charter members of the Endangered Species Act when it was signed in They are endangered mainly as a result of habitat loss, but unregulated hunting in the early s also contributed to their decline. At one time, the range for the birds extended throughout midwestern North America.
By , there were less than 25 whooping cranes remaining in the wild and perhaps as few as By the year , the population of whooping cranes had climbed to birds through conservation efforts. Four years ago, a survey of the population of whooping cranes wintering in south Texas climbed to more than for the first time since the late s. Growing the population is difficult because whooping cranes typically will have only two eggs per year. On average, only one chick will survive from that clutch.
The four deaths in Oklahoma are the most whooping cranes ever killed at one time in a poaching incident, according to the foundation. And we can continue to be the voice and act for whooping cranes on their wintering grounds in Texas and through reintroduction efforts. More: 'If it's not a , it's close to it:' Oklahoma Wildlife Department shifts bass management strategy.
The cameras are fully functioning smartphones using a software application from Visual Labs, a California software company.
The device can also function as a digital camera, an audio recorder and a personnel locator. As soon as it is uploaded I can watch it up here in the office in Oklahoma City. The illegal trapping charge was valid because he had violated rules he did not know existed. He did not have his name on his traps nor did he insert them 12 inches into a hollow or hole. With all fairness, dad accepted that he had broken laws and he even took the game warden back to his traps and let him search the house and the smokehouse where he kept his hides.
The moment that the game warden walked through the house looking for illegal activity taught me a valuable lesson. I am not cut out to be a criminal. I try my best to obey all game laws because they are there to help the wildlife, they are fair to everyone and basically, I am scared to death to break them!
It is always in the back of my mind that I will get caught. A few years ago, two road hunters shot a four-point buck in a field below my house.