5 minute read
Editor’s Notes
by CHESTER MOORE :: TF&G Editor-in-Chief
Beards, Bighorns and a Big Change of Perspective
IN OUR FAMILY, THE PURSUIT OF wildlife was as natural as breathing. Whether dragging mud minnows for ounders or hunting whitetails in the wilderness growing up, we always focused our energies on wild things.
As I stood at 10,000 feet glassing a ridge for bighorns, both breath and energy were in short supply. Days of hiking and glassing in the high country le this coastal Texan exhausted. en, out of the corner of my eye, he appeared.
A beautiful bighorn ram emerged from a steep slope and made its way toward me. Frustration turned to excitement, and suddenly, the air didn’t feel quite so thin.
I raised my camera, focused on the full-curled ram, and pushed the shu er bu on in this serene se ing among snow-covered peaks where I and my wife Lisa celebrated our 20th anniversary in 2019.
A few months later, I had dinner with my friend ompson Temple and slid him one of the photos .
“I might never get drawn for a bighorn tag, but I sure had fun shooting this big ram with my camera,” I said.
“Chester, you know in the Bible, we learned that David snuck into King Saul’s tent and cut a piece of his robe o while he slept. He could’ve killed Saul, but he still got a victory,” Temple said.
“When you do all of that work, and you get within photo range, pushing the shu er on your camera is just like squeezing the trigger of your ri e. You made your shot.”
At that moment, something clicked. I had always dreamed of pursuing sheep, involving drawing a tag and going on an epic hunt. However, going full bore a er sheep with my camera would have another powerful bene t—conservation.
My career as a wildlife journalist a ords me a voice here in Texas Fish & Game and on many media platforms. at could be bene cial for sheep and other wildlife. e nal puzzle piece fell into place a er I found a box of old scrapbooks at my mother’s house.
When I was a kid, used copies of Sports A eld, Field & Stream, Outdoor Life, and other outdoor publications were a nickel apiece at the local thri store. I would go in and buy them out. en Dad and I would sit together and make scrapbooks of our favorite pictures and dream grand hunts together.
My Dad passed away from natural causes while deer hunting with me in South Texas in 2014, so this was like ge ing back part of my favorite hunting partner.
A er ipping through the rst book, I was blown away by the presence of sheep. ere were desert bighorns, Stone sheep, Dall sheep, Rocky Mountain bighorns, and even urials ere were more sheep than any other animal. en, there were turkeys. Lots of them. ere were shots of hunters with big-bearded gobblers, stru ing gobblers, ying turkeys and even a shot of a hen with poults.
I have always used photo-journalism as an awareness-raising mechanism, but this revelation gave me new purpose and created two projects. e rst is “Turkey Revolution,” which seeks to raise awareness about wild turkeys, their conservation challenges and their habitat.
In year one, my goal was to photograph the Grand Slam, which I did and reported on here in these pages. Year two was about photographing an Eastern turkey in East Texas, which was super challenging and happened in May 2020 in Newton County near the Sabine River.
Year three was a quest to nd Gould’s turkeys in Arizona, and I had the incredible privilege of photographing two massive gobblers in the Sky Islands area in March 2021.
For 2022, the goal is to involve you. e more people who realize we have Eastern turkeys in Texas, the more light we can shine on the great work done by the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department and National Wild Turkey FederationTexas to restore them. Also, the more we discuss the need for quality habitat for turkeys, bene ts everything from whitetails to woodpeckers.
So, I have created a new “Eastern Turkey Aware” challenge token. If you have photographed Eastern turkeys in East Texas or Louisiana on a game camera or by traditional photography, email the photos with the county or parish the photo was taken to chester@chestermoore.com.
We will share these photos in posts in our e-newsle er, post them at shgame.com, and they will go in the Turkey Revolution photo gallery at highercalling.net.
In addition, my Sheep Scrapbook project is ongoing. If you have photographed wild sheep (native American wild sheep—not exotics such as mou on or aoudad) email them to chester@ chestermoore.com. Include the state where you photographed them with as much information as you would like to share. ese photos will also be shared through our e-newsle er and in a special gallery at highercalling.net.
Everyone who contributes a photo gets a special challenge token. e goal is to raise the pro le of wild sheep and tell the story about the literal pandemic they have faced for the last 150 years through encountering pneumonia-infected domestic sheep.
I still love to hunt turkeys, and I would probably faint if I drew one of the desert bighorn tags I apply for every year. However, I get as much thrill by capturing photos of these and other animals.
I have li le room for taxidermy where I live now, so my walls have but a few animals on them. Instead, they are mainly covered with photos of turkeys, sheep, elk, moose, bears and other animals I “shot” with my Canon camera.
Many things in life are about the perspective we choose in pursuing them. In this case it has increased my love of encountering wildlife.
It’s a blessing to be a part of Texas Fish & Game where conservation-centric ideas like this are embraced by the publisher and engaged by the readers.
I look forward to seeing your Eastern turkey and sheep photos. Email Chester Moore at cmoore@fi shgame.com