After visiting West Texas in 2013 I wrote this on my cell phone in a few short minutes driving back home (well I wasn't driving haha) It had such an effect on me the words just spilled out into this. It is one of my favorites. My fav paragraph is marked with **Asterisks**
Dear Wild West Texas,
I have hunted the Heart of the Hill
Country & the Soul of South Texas but only passed through your land out
west. You have a personality all its own that has stood the test of time, ignores the
progression of technology, and has touched a piece of my soul. You, Wild West
Texas, have been a blessed adventure I will never forget.
I found you 50 miles from the
nearest anything, with no cell phone service, a single radio station of AM
only, and the only traffic traveling your roads were tire testers. Your dust
has filled my nose, my eyes, and my teeth; not to mention my gear but I am
thankful for your unforgiving nature. Your rocky, steep mountains and hills
tested my steps but provided breathtaking views. Your canyons and draws showed
off your beauty and serenity, a stark green contrast to the monotone pallet of
dust, dirt, & rock.
Oh Wild West Texas you are so
stubborn but yet so inviting. When you showed me your sparse water I was
thankful and you were gracious enough to allow animals to drink and survive. I
can feel your intensity in the dryness of my hands and chapped lips but feel
your softness in the fur of the rams & sheep who call you home.
Thank you for revealing yourself to
me in the people who live life a little slower, spend their entire day outside,
work hard, are gracious for the important things in life and love every bit of
it. Seeing children outside from sun up to sun down only emphasizes your true
beauty and tradition and reminds me of why I want to be in the field as much as
possible.
Your Wild spirit captured my heart
and secured a place in it. You unveiled unique animals to me I have never seen
up close including Texas Dahl, Corsican Rams, & Barbado’s. You also
produced Axis deer, hogs, whitetail deer, turkey, and red stag, all free
roaming, unfenced and wild. You provided unlimited predators and varmints
including over 10 foxes we were able to call in. As I heard them bark I said
Thank You for such an open area to see and hear them.
**Wild West Texas, you slowed down
even more at night and wrapped your arms around me with your endless sky,
countless stars, and a silence so loud it was deafening. You are a
contradiction that many will never understand. From afar you are a vast, empty,
endless area of rugged land that is stifling, uncomfortable, and almost
painful; up close, however, as I stood in the middle of nowhere, it is your
somewhere that makes me believe, adore, and love you.**
Although you did not provide an
opportunity to harvest an animal with my bow, you did present them to be taken
with a gun; I however passed on that opportunity and instead soaked up your
beauty and saw things to add to my scrapbook of memories in my heart and head.
I saw two gorgeous lambs that were so pregnant they could barely walk; a piece
of me was hoping to witness their birth in the middle of the wild. It would
have been an exquisite moment to be there and watch the circle of life from 15
yards away in my ground blind. Even though a birth didn’t happen I saw the love
of a mother in nature and I am content. I know, however, that you my friend
will be there to nurture them and raise them.
Finally Wild West Texas, you have
unlocked a piece of my soul and opened my eyes to another unique place to hunt,
a place to love for what it is; an unforgiving land that forces you to respect
its beauty of endless skies, mountains, and rock bluffs. I hope you will remain
untouched by the destruction of the city and technology; do not let it change
you, but rather change the minds of those who only see you from afar. Stay Wild
my West Texas friend, ill see you again soon!
Sincerely,
A Huntress with a Wild Heart