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- Heart Of Texas Guided Hunts
Heart Of Texas Guided Hunts
Hunt Info
Small Game
We provide our clients professional Texas Guided Hunts. Here at H.O.T. Guided Hunts our mission is simple, we strive to insure our clients the best Guided Hunts and
outdoor adventures in Texas. We offer our clients the best Texas Upland Bird Hunting,
Texas Goose Hunting, Texas Duck Hunting and Texas Hog Hunting adventures
produced. With over 100,000 acres of land in Central Texas, we have the ability to be
diverse and successful. We are constantly striving to perfect our hunting
properties for our Texas Guided Hunts, thru wildlife management programs. Proper
management such as productive food plots, watering holes and preferred cover are high
on our list. As the saying goes, you can't keep them if you don't feed them! Waterfowl Hunting, both duck hunting and goose hunting are a main stay for our business, our Central Texas Upland bird preserve is managed year around to provide our clients with Texas Quail Hunts, Texas Pheasant Hunts, and Texas Chucker hunts to all experience levels of hunters. Our Texas Hog Hunts are first rate and our Central Texas Dove Hunting has been known to be gun blistering
Additional Client Services-
Our Lodge and ranches are located in central Texas about an hour and a half south of the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex. For clients where it would be inconvenient for them to drive, Waco Regional Airport offers commercial flights by American Airlines and Continental Airlines for clients that prefer to fly rather than drive. For clients that are arriving by private aircraft, Waco Regional in Waco and Campbell Field near Corsicana are available to meet your flight needs. Our client services can arrange transportation from local airports to the lodge upon request (please ask us about this when arranging your hunting packages).
User reviews
1. The lights on the feeders work just fine, they are solar powered and are not made to light up the field. perhaps if you stopped playing angry birds in the stand and actually paid attention you would be able to see the pigs are there.
2. yes, occasionally feeders go out, it is a problem dealt with across outdoorsmen everywhere however the pigs get into a schedule and are usually wait at the feeder for it to go off. So your point on that bit is invalid. Again pay attention and don't wait for the sound of the feeder going off to be your alarm clock.
All in all H.O.T. Guided hunts is well worth every cent. He understands this business and the way it should be ran. I will never Hog Hunt anywhere else again.
Hunt Info
1. The first night, my feeder did not go off and there was no light. I could not see anything and had to check periodically with my laser designator to see if anything was at the feeder. I could hear pigs squealing nearby and I just know that the lights scared them off. When we got picked up by the guide, I politely expressed my dissatisfaction. He promised that the next night, he would make sure that the feeder was working right. Great, 50% of the trip was a waste of time and money due to their faulty feeder. When you go hunting, sometimes there are no animals, that’s hunting for you. But when you pay for a professionally guided hunt, it is my expectation that everything that can be controlled, is controlled. This includes working lights and feeders. They screwed me out of my first night hunting.
2. When you get to the lodge, they make you watch a “safety video”, which is mostly a half hour long commercial for their rental night vision guns and thermal guns. They run about 100-300 dollars per night rental. They really put on the high pressure to rent the guns. Nobody in the group rented one the first night, as we all brought our own guns to Texas (at considerable expense in some cases). They told our group that we would be able to see the pigs from their feeder lights with high quality optics, which we all had (Leupolds). The truth is that the feeder lights were so dim in all cases that nobody could see to shoot! I feel that this is done on purpose to generate an extra 100 to 300 dollars per night per hunter on the trips. I wish they would have just added 100 dollars per night to the cost of the package and provided basic night vision equipment instead of misleading the hunters into believing that it would be possible to see and shoot the pigs with a regular scope. It is my opinion that they put a cheapo price online so that you book and then you find that it is more than double that (if you pay 300 per night for the thermal scope) in order to have a chance at being successful once you are in Texas, at the lodge, right before you go hunting.
3. When I had booked the hunt, I gave Allen our travel dates and I mentioned that I was staying an extra day just in case I had not yet gotten a pig. He said at that time that it would be no problem to pay for another day hunting once I got there. He said that he was flexible. Fast forward to after 2 nights of hunting, nobody in the group had bagged a pig, and my feeder was faulty the first night. I wanted to hunt another night and I thought that they should cover the cost to make up for the first night and the lack of light. They said that another night of hunting was not possible, contradicting what Allen had told me earlier. I offered to pay full price for the hunt and even rent one of the expensive guns at this point. Again, they said that it was not possible. At this point, I called and texted Allen himself to talk to him about it. After all, I have taken off work and flown down to Texas. I’m here and he is the one changing the plans at the last minute. When I got Allen on the telephone, he told me that I had “acted like a total ass” that members of our group had “been running our mouths”, and that he was embarrassed for us. He told me over the telephone that my “alligator mouth did not match my hummingbird ass”. He was very unprofessional and he was attempting to be intimidating, but instead came off like some sort of drunken hillbilly. To my knowledge, no members of our group had been rude or impolite, in fact the group contained 3 physicians, a businessman, an active duty member of the Airforce, and a professional tool and die maker who is also a professional hunter education instructor and firearms safety instructor, all mature individuals. There had been polite dissatisfaction expressed to the lackey that Allen provided to actually take us out to the woods, and this dissatisfaction related to legitimate complaints like the lights not coming on at the feeders, and not the lack of game. Allen told me on the telephone that we were beating up on a “kid”. The lackey was 26, a Baylor graduate, a purported professional hunting guide, and certainly man enough to take our money when we arrived. I wanted Allen to know that I was not happy with the situation and give him a chance to make things right. Instead, he personally insured that the part of the trip that I would remember forever was his insulting, vulgar tirade of a telephone call.
Book your trip with somebody else and let these huckster clowns go out of business. They deserve it.