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Deep in the Heart of Roosterland
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photo: Brent Humphreys
"There is no way to exaggerate how critical these community hunts are to the towns of the Texas Panhandle," says Sue Hawkins of the Hart Lions Club. "We'll bring in more than $30,000 with these hunts. Our next biggest fund-raiser is the hot dog booth at the annual Hart Days festival. We might clear $1,500 at that."
In Nazareth - population 365 - the hunts are just as important. "We survive on this all year long," says David Bounds, who runs the city's hunts for its Lions Club. "We make our money in December and give it away the rest of the year." And for the hunters who show up from across Texas and the surrounding states, the Panhandle hunts provide a payback that goes beyond the sight of a rooster cackling over cornstalks. "I'll hunt elsewhere later in the season," says Scott Stafford, who's taken part in the action for more than a decade. "But there's something different about opening weekend up here. It's important to support these communities."
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