TexasBestFishing.com

We're All About Fishing in Texas!

Menu

FLW News | BASSMASTER NEWS | ESPN - OutDoors |

Latest news

Fish Kill Investigated on Fairfield Lake

Fairfield – Texas Parks and Wildlife Department Inland Fisheries management and Kills and Spills Team (KAST) biologists investigated a localized fish kill on Fairfield Lake the first week of September. 

Inland Fisheries management staff conducting an aquatic vegetation survey on the reservoir discovered the kill and notified the regional KAST biologist at 10:00 A.M. on September 4 that numerous fish of all species (notably large redfish) were dead.

|

Annual Texas Parks & Wildlife Expo Set for Oct. 4-5

AUSTIN, Texas — The Texas Parks & Wildlife Expo continues to add new activities while sticking to a hands-on, expert-assisted formula that has made it the largest free event of its kind in the nation. Last year approximately 42,000 people visited Expo at the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department headquarters in Austin.

|

Texas State Parks Hope to Hook More Anglers

AUSTIN, Texas — In Texas, fishing and warmer weather go together like chips and salsa. The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department wants those already "hooked" on fishing and newcomers to the sport to keep in mind that Texas state park waters offer ideal and economical spots for pursuing the family-friendly sport.

|

CHECK OUT OUR FORUMS!

COME JOIN US, AND STAY UP TO DATE ON ALL THE FISHING IN TEXAS!

If you fish in the great state of Texas, then you need to be a member of our message forums! There is no cost to join, and it will only take you a few minutes. Stay up to date on all the latest lake information. What the fish are biting and where! You will not find any more current information than here. We have hundreds of members just like you that love to spend time on the water. With the price of gas today, you need the latest information so your trip will be a success. Well, we have it.

Just click on the "Join Now" sign to check it out!

 


 

|

Biologists Launch Study of Two Texas Tidal Streams

AUSTIN, Texas — In March, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department biologists began a two-year study of two tidal streams on the middle coast, sampling fish, bottom-dwelling organisms, and water quality to measure the quality of aquatic life inhabiting these ecologically important areas.

|

Search



Regional News


News from across Texas and around the country

Regional Newspapers

Dallas News Sportsday Outdoors

Corpus Christi Caller Times Fishing Report

Bay City Tribune

Galveston County Daily News

Houston Cronicle Outdoor Report

Port Aransas South Jetty

Port Lavaca Wave

Rockport Pilot

San Antonio Express News


Amistad Rise Fuels Economic Bonanza

Regional News >>

DEL RIO, Texas — Travel U.S. 90 through Del Rio and out to Amistad International Reservoir and it’s obvious there’s something going on in this border town.

New motels and restaurants are going up, and parking lots of old ones are crowded.

Skeletons of houses under construction dot hillsides overlooking the lake.

Del Rio and Val Verde County are experiencing an economic boom based on a commodity that’s normally scarce in this area perched on the edge of the Chihuahuan Desert: water.

Following a 10-year drought, soaking rains refilled Amistad beginning in 2003. The rising water flooded vegetation that had grown up on the dry lake bottom, and submersed vegetation such as hydrilla expanded as well, making lots of hiding places where baby bass could grow up.

Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD) took advantage of the rising water and stepped up its fish stocking program, putting 874,000 largemouth bass fingerlings into the lake in 2004 and 2005. In 2006 the lake received 4,519 Budweiser Sharelunker fingerlings as a result of ShareLunker 400 coming from the lake.

TPWD and the National Park Service cooperated on studies in 2002-2003 and 2007 that gave snapshots of the lake before and after the rise. During 2002-2003 anglers fished for 319,473 hours on Amistad and spent $4.2 million in Val Verde County and another $1.2 million in Texas outside the county.  During the 2002-2003 annual period anglers caught 197,000 total bass. 

Amistad received a great deal of national publicity in 2006 due to several highly successful televised bass fishing tournaments. Hours spent fishing skyrocketed to 606,189 in 2007. Preliminary results from an economic impact study show direct expenditures by anglers in 2007 jumped to $13.7 million in Val Verde County and $7 million in Texas outside the county. Add it all up and that’s $20.7 million in actual dollars spent, an increase of $15.3 million, or 183 percent. A considerable portion of this increase was new money to Texas as representation of non-Texas anglers at Amistad increased from 7 percent in 2002-2003 to 13 percent in 2007 according to Jeremy Leitz, a fisheries researcher for TPWD.

That was good news for the local economy, but the news for largemouth bass anglers was even better.

"The 2007 creel survey indicated that the Amistad bass fishery remains one of the best in the country," said Randy Myers, the TPWD fisheries biologist in charge of the lake. "Catch and harvest of largemouth bass increased substantially, with a significant number of fish four pounds and larger. This suggests that the reservoir’s fish population continued to support high angling success for an increased number of anglers."

There’s a Louisiana saying that sums up the situation best: "Laissez les bons temps rouler" (Let the good times roll) or as they might say in Del Rio, "Deje que los buenos tiempos continúen."

The good times are now on Amistad. Long may they roll.

Back