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Bats and Caves of Montague County
Montague County's bat fauna — Mexican free-tailed bats, tree-roosters, bridge colonies — against the county's limestone-and-sandstone geology that produces few natural caves but abundant alternative roosts.
Brushy Creek Watershed
Brushy Creek drains portions of Montague County's Cross Timbers uplands, providing riparian corridor habitat in a county where creek-bottom hardwoods are among the most ecologically productive landscapes.
Climate and Weather of Montague County
Hot summers, variable winters, ~35 inches of annual precipitation, persistent tornado risk, and recurring drought cycles — the full climate profile of Montague County, Texas.
Cross Timbers Ecoregion
The Cross Timbers — a long belt of post oak and blackjack oak savannah running from Kansas through Oklahoma into central Texas — forms the ecological foundation of Montague County.
Dark Skies of Montague County
Rural Montague County retains some of the darker skies in north-central Texas — far enough from the DFW light dome for Milky Way viewing on moonless nights, with Bortle Class 4 typical and Class 3 possible near the Red River.
Denton Creek Watershed
Denton Creek drains the southern half of Montague County south into the Trinity River system, connecting MoCo to the broader DFW water basin and marking the county's principal drainage divide.
Drought Cycles in Montague County
Drought is not an occasional event in Montague County — it is a recurring condition. The 1950s drought of record, the 2011 catastrophe, the ongoing 2024–2025 cycle, and what tree rings tell us about the next one.
Edible and Medicinal Native Plants of Montague County
The wild plants of Cross Timbers and Grand Prairie Texas — mustang grapes, dewberries, prickly pear, pecan, yarrow, willow bark — and their history as food, medicine, and material.
Feral Hogs in Montague County: Population, Damage, and Control
Feral hogs are the dominant invasive mammal of Texas and the single largest wildlife problem facing rural Montague County landowners today. With no natural predators, explosive reproduction, and year-round no-bag-limit hunting status, the feral hog has reshaped the county's agriculture, ecology, and rural land management culture within a single generation.
Hunting and Fishing in Montague County: Leases, Seasons, and the Outdoor Economy
Hunting leases are one of Montague County's significant modern income streams, with white-tailed deer, dove, hog, turkey, and quail drawing DFW-based hunters to MoCo ranches. Fishing at Lake Amon G. Carter and Lake Nocona rounds out a quiet outdoor economy rooted in the county's private land base and Central Flyway location.
Migratory Birds and the Central Flyway Through Montague County
Montague County sits squarely in the Central Flyway — North America's great plains migration corridor — with the Red River valley forming a natural east-west landmark for birds moving between Arctic and Canadian breeding grounds and Texas, Mexico, and Latin American wintering areas. The county is a flyover and stopover zone for tens of millions of birds twice a year.
Monarch Butterfly Migration Through Montague County
Every fall, Montague County sits in the path of one of the natural world's great events: the eastern monarch butterfly migration from Canadian breeding grounds to Mexican overwintering forests. MoCo lies on the eastern edge of the central Texas funnel that concentrates monarchs in September and October. The species is now listed as Endangered by the IUCN, making every milkweed stem in the county a small piece of something larger.
Native Birds of Montague County: Breeding Species, Game Birds, and Birding
Montague County's bird fauna reflects its position at the intersection of three avian regions — Cross Timbers woodland, Grand Prairie grassland, and Red River riparian corridor — resulting in a remarkably diverse year-round and migratory bird community. The scissor-tailed flycatcher is the county's signature bird; the painted bunting is its most vivid summer secret.
Native Fish of Montague County: Red River, Lakes, and the Sport Fishery
Montague County's fish fauna divides between the salt-influenced Red River along its northern boundary and the warmwater fishery of interior creeks and constructed reservoirs. Lake Amon G. Carter and Lake Nocona anchor recreational fishing for bass, catfish, and crappie, while the Red River's Permian-salt character supports a distinct community of native species found nowhere else in Texas.
Native Mammals of Montague County: Deer, Predators, and the Post-Frontier Wildlife Community
Montague County's mammal fauna reflects its position at the boundary between Eastern Woodlands and Plains — white-tailed deer in the Cross Timbers, coyotes filling the predator vacancy left by absent wolves, gray foxes climbing post oaks, beavers rebuilding in the creek bottoms. The county's wildlife community is a post-frontier assemblage shaped as much by what was removed as by what remains.
Native Reptiles and Amphibians of Montague County
From the iconic Texas horned lizard to softshell turtles in the Red River, Montague County's herpetofauna spans the Cross Timbers divide — eastern woodland species mixing with western prairie forms.
Native Trees of Montague County
Post oak and blackjack oak define the Cross Timbers uplands. Pecan groves and cottonwoods anchor the river bottoms. A field guide to the trees that built and still shape Montague County.
Native Wildflowers of Montague County
Bluebonnets arrive in late March, Indian paintbrush follows close behind, and by September Maximilian sunflowers line every county road. A seasonal guide to Montague County's wildflowers.
Notable Tornadoes in Montague County
Montague County has experienced multiple violent tornadoes across its documented history, including an F4 in 1906 that killed 17 and nearly wiped Bellevue off the map. A chronology of significant storm events.
Post Oak Savannah and the Cross Timbers in Montague County
Post oak (Quercus stellata) and blackjack oak (Quercus marilandica) define the Western Cross Timbers ecoregion that covers much of Montague County — drought-adapted oaks on sandy, acidic soils that shaped the county's settlement patterns, wildlife, and land use history.
Red River Ecology
The Red River forms Montague County's 30-mile northern boundary — a salty, sand-bed Plains river whose riparian corridor concentrates wildlife, history, and human story out of all proportion to its width.
Spring Bird Migration Through Montague County
Spring migration through the Central Flyway brings millions of birds through Montague County from March through May: songbirds, raptors, waterfowl, and shorebirds moving north along the Red River corridor and Cross Timbers habitat.
Spring Storms and Severe Weather in Montague County
Montague County sits in tornado alley: spring brings supercell thunderstorms, large hail, damaging winds, and tornadoes from March through June. The county's documented history includes multiple F4-class tornado events.
Water Rights and Irrigation in Montague County
Texas water law, the 1887 Fitzgerald irrigation grant, the 1950s drought that built two reservoirs, and the rule of capture that still governs every well in the county.