National Wildlife Refuge Yields Quality Deer Hunting 

Mar 1, 2019
Water and sky are one in the afterglow of sunset at Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge - photo USFWS

Zayne Wagner has a whole lot going for him. The grade-school boy loves the outdoors, fishing and hunting, and is often a shadow to his dad and grandpa along the waters and in the woods and fields of eastern Oklahoma. And he lives not too far from Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge.

The refuge, named in honor of the Native American who invented the Cherokee alphabet, sits at the head of Robert Kerr Reservoir where the Arkansas and Canadian rivers conjoin then pour southeasterly toward the Mississippi. It’s big water. The national wildlife refuge lies on the southwest edge of the Ozark Highlands.

Snow geese cloud the sky above Seqouyah National Wildlife Refuge - photo USFWS

Rich bottomland hardwoods dominate the 32 square-mile refuge, interspersed with upland meadows and fields. It’s habitat for a litany of dabbling puddle ducks, snow geese and wading birds that make seasonal stop overs. Bald eagles adorn the spring skies on forays from their massive nests that lie in the crooks atop muscular cottonwood trees. The big birds hunt bass and shad and carp and catfish, and unsuspecting ducks to feed their hungry eaglets.

The refuge has an impressive population of white-tailed deer, too. That’s what drew young Zayne to Sequoyah. The refuge issues 25 deer tags to youth hunters by a lottery administered by the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation. Zayne was one of the lucky hunters. For him and his family, it was a fruitful hunt.

“He doesn’t realize just how big of a deer he took,” said his jubilant father, Nathan. “We were confident Zayne would see deer. He and his papaw and I scouted the woods and fields three times looking for sign and where to set up on opening day.”

The investment paid off. An hour after legal shooting time, a big buck showed itself at the edge of the woods.

“It was 200 yards out—too far away—and Zayne could hardly control himself. He had serious buck fever,” said Nathan. “He calmed himself. And we waited it out, quiet and still, another 10 minutes as the buck lazily moved within range of a .45 caliber smokeless muzzleloader resting on shooting sticks.”

Leveled on the heart and lungs as he’d been taught, he squeezed the trigger. Like a ghost, the animal was gone. The boy thought he’d missed it. Nathan reloaded the muzzleloader and they traipsed through a muddy field, onward over a gentle rise, and into the gray woods. That’s when the boy saw the white underbelly of a most impressive buck on the forest floor. The animal bounded only a few steps from a well-placed shot. And what did he want do next? Call his granddad.

Zayne Wagner harvested an impressive whitetail buck at Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge -photo Nathan Wagner permission

Zayne was one of 16 young folks to harvest a deer at the refuge. What’s more, these hunters were among the first to have access to portions of the national wildlife refuge previously closed to hunting. Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge and other national wildlife refuges across the country strive to open new areas to managed hunts for people of all ages. Hunting serves well in sustainably managing the deer population and the habitats that deer and many other species need.

As for the Wagners, they appreciate the opportunity to hunt on the refuge and intend to try to get back to Sequoyah next deer season. They eagerly await for the application period to start in the spring. Wild game and fish are common table fare for them. As it is with all hunters, their license fees and taxes paid on firearms and ammunition pay for conservation through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Wildlife and Sport Fish Restoration Program.

Learn more about hunting at national wildlife refuges, here www.fws.gov/hunting

Craig Springer, External Affairs, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service – Southwest Region