When I drew a tag for this hunt I couldn't find much info on the web to help me prepare. Now that I've done it, I figure a blog for future hunters to reference will come in handy.
The first and foremost thing you need to know about this hunt is that access to the island is by boat only. Roughly a 20 min trip across the bay from Port O Connor. If you don't have a seaworthy boat, there are a couple of fishing guides the Port O Conner Chamber of Commerce can recommend to ferry you. My cost was $200 round trip.
All the hunters are pretty much required to stay on the island and tent camp during the hunt. There are a handful of covered shelters in the camping area about 100 yards from the dock, and I suggest you get there early enough to claim one. Here's what they all look like.
And here's what it looked like after setting up camp. There is a constant breeze on the island so bring tarps to create a wind break. The camping area is also covered in sand burrs so you'll want tarps to put under your tent as well. The utility wagon you see in the pic was a life saver for me since I was doing this hunt solo. Got borrowed over and over by other campers. Makes hauling 100lb coolers full of ice a lot easier.
It's primitive camping with no electric or water in the camp site. There is a bathroom and one outdoor shower that run's on non-potable water. But... for my trip the well was down so they locked us out of the bathroom and everyone had to take a shovel and head to the bushes. They also have a skinning shelter with gantrels by the hunter check-in station, but of course the water hose there didn't do us any good. I highly recommend you call ahead to see if the well is working. If not you'll need to haul in a lot more water for your hunt to handle cleaning, butchering and bathing. The weather for this hunt is typically warm.. 60's, 70's or even 80's on some days. So deer can't be hung overnight. You need to quarter them and get them on ice ASAP.
After arrival on the first morning the TPWD crew will call everyone to the hunter check station (about 200 yards past the camping area) for orientation and to draw for stand-by hunters. About half of the drawn hunters no-showed this year which they say is typical for this hunt. There were probably 20 locals, mostly shrimpers and fisherman from the area, waiting trying for a standby slot. I'd say stand-by success was roughly 50% of the folks that showed. Once they have the permits all filled you draw a blind number out of a hat. There were around 25 blinds open for this hunt spread up and down the 30 miles of island. Experienced hunters were hoping for far south or north blinds based on past success. But no one on our hunt didn't see deer, so any blind can be a good one IMO. Here's a map (blinds not shown).
https://tpwd.texas.gov/huntwild/hunt/wma/images/MIrevised.gifThey tell you to bring rubber boots for a good reason. Most of the blinds require a least some trekking through mud or water. Walks to the blinds can be as short as 10 yards, but most are 100-300 yards of walking. Some as much as a mile. The first blind I drew #16 was marked "Wet Walk", and turned out to be more than that. At one point I had to walk 40 yards through swamp over the top of my boots. I called the biologist that had dropped me off and asked to move to any other open blind because I didn't want to try and float a buck out of that swamp. (yes there are gators) Ends up that blind was unhuntable unless you were really determined and had hip or chest waders. So I was given blind #10 which is roughly mid-island. It only had about 50 yards of ankle deep mud to deal with which was no biggie.
My first 3 sit's were in blind #10 and here are a couple videos of the view and terrain. I saw multiple deer each sitting, and at one point took and missed a very long ill advised shot on a nice10pt in a heavy cross wind. Still kicking my self for trying it, but it was a clean miss. There are no feeders or baiting allowed, and you can ONLY shoot from a blind, so the entire game is waiting for a cruising buck or doe to come past your stand.
My last sit of the hunt on the morning of day 3 I asked to move to an open blind (#4) on the north end of the island near the light house. Here are some pics and a video from that blind. Note how deep the grass is in this series of pic's. In a lot of cases deer can walk past you at 100 yards and you'd never see them.
Blind #4 on North end by the lighthouse.