- What should I bring on a fishing trip?
- A fishing license that is valid for the water we'll fish (often the Lake Texoma Type 208 joint license on the lake—see the license section on the Fishing page), weather-appropriate clothing, snacks if you like, and sunglasses. We provide rods, tackle, and safety gear for typical trips—confirm details when you book.
- What should I bring on a hunt?
- Required licenses and stamps, shotgun and non-toxic shot where required, blaze orange if specified by law, and waders or boots suited to the terrain. Your confirmation email will list anything specific.
- Do you guarantee fish or game?
- Wild animals and fish do not read calendars—no ethical guide can guarantee limits. We guarantee professional effort, local knowledge, and a safe, legal hunt or fishing day.
- How do bookings and deposits work?
- Use the online booking request; we follow up to confirm dates, pricing, and deposit or cancellation policy. Final terms belong in your contract—replace this text with your real policy.
- What fishing license do I need for Lake Texoma or the Red River?
- On Lake Texoma, most guests use the joint Lake Texoma (Type 208)license so both sides of the lake are covered. Texas-only or Oklahoma-only licenses cover only that state's portion. Below Denison Dam, a Texoma license is not valid—you need the correct license for Texas vs. Oklahoma water where you are actually fishing. Full details, purchase links, and senior exemptions are on our Fishing page (licenses section).
- What are the striped bass limits on Lake Texoma?
- Limits, river vs. lake differences, other species, and invasive-species rules are kept current on our Fishing page (bag limits & conservation)—always double-check TPWD and Oklahoma Wildlife before your trip because rules can change.