黑料天堂

Skip to main content

Forever Wild's Lawley Field Trial Area Offers Variety of Outdoor Recreation

Lamar

Retired disabled Navy veteran Lamar Coleman bagged this beautiful buck on a Field Trial Area hunt. ADCNR photo

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

One might think Forever Wild Land Trust鈥檚 M. Barnett Lawley Field Trial Area is all about sporting dogs, but it鈥檚 much, much more. The 4,323-acre property in Hale County, managed by the 黑料天堂鈥 (ADCNR) State Lands Division, is indeed one of the premier competitive sporting dog event areas in the Southeast, and it also provides numerous outdoor recreational opportunities for youth and physically disabled hunters, beginner anglers, and bird-watching enthusiasts as well as field-based learning opportunities for college students.

ADCNR Commissioner Chris Blankenship said the Field Trial Area, which was once the State Cattle Ranch, is about to get even better with a $3 million investment in infrastructure being used to establish a new event center with an adjacent outdoor pavilion and restrooms. Restrooms have also been added in the Field Trial Areas as well as a large expansion in the paddock and barns for events that use horses. Funds for the work come from multiple sources, including Innovate 黑料天堂, the State Legislature, the Forever Wild Stewardship Fund and ADCNR.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important for the public to know that we manage the property for multiple priorities,鈥 Commissioner Blankenship said. 鈥淲e have youth fishing events. We have youth duck hunts. We have youth dove hunters. We have youth and physically disabled deer hunts in addition to the 30-plus competitive sporting dog events a year. We even serve as a stop along the Black Belt Birding Festival. It is truly a multi-purpose area enjoyed by more than 3,850 visitors each year. The infrastructure improvements will really set the Field Trial Area as the premier location for outdoor recreation in the Black Belt.鈥

State Lands Division Director Patti McCurdy is proud of the ongoing efforts of her staff to manage the property for the benefit of multiple user groups.

 鈥淢anaging the property with a goal of not just expanding public access but also providing a wide range of outdoor recreation opportunities requires a lot of planning and hard work,鈥 McCurdy said. 鈥淢y staff does a great job of furthering ADCNR鈥檚 efforts to enhance conservation habitats and expand public access in a manner that also delivers a positive economic impact to surrounding communities.鈥 

Jeremy Doss, Chief Enforcement Officer with State Lands, said State Lands is working diligently to enhance the habitat for multiple species, turning what was once a cattle ranch with abundant pastures into a haven for wild game and an area of thriving native prairie grasslands.

鈥淲hen the Department of Corrections owned the property, there was already a physically disabled hunting area on the property,鈥 Doss said. 鈥淲e do all the youth hunts and operate the physically disabled hunts in the interior. The physically disabled area has a lot of edges, mixed stand of hardwoods and pines, three green fields and three physically disabled-access shooting houses.鈥

Doss said all three stands are typically filled for each hunt. Visit and click on the link to register for the physically disabled hunts and youth hunts.

One hunter who recently took advantage of the physically disabled hunting program was disabled Navy veteran Lamar Coleman from Pell City, who bagged what just about every hunter would consider to be a trophy buck, the huge, symmetrical eight-point seen in the photo.

Coleman was sitting in the stand where he had hunted before with little success.

鈥淚鈥檝e been hunting this property since 2017,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e only seen one other buck sitting in that house. It was a big six-point that I didn鈥檛 take a shot at, but he was looking back, and I thought a bigger deer was coming. But nothing came out, and the six-point got away. I didn鈥檛 actually shoot a deer there until 2023, and it was a doe.鈥

During his most recent hunt, Coleman was watching a cut-through lane that the deer often use to travel between fields.

鈥淚鈥檓 facing that way, watching that lane to the right,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hen out of the corner of my eye to the left, I see movement. I thought to myself there鈥檚 no way a deer is coming from that direction. It鈥檚 broad daylight, so I eased back to the left and looked. He walked out and was looking to his left. He didn鈥檛 pay me any attention at all. I guess there were some other deer crossing in the thicket over there.

鈥淚 could see his rack, but I couldn鈥檛 tell how may points he had. And I could only see the top of his shoulder because of the grass. He was standing in a little dip. I thought, 鈥楳an, if I don鈥檛 take this shot, I might not get another one.鈥欌欌

This giant white-tailed buck was taken by Jacob Bates on a Field Trial Area Youth Hunt. ADCNR photo

Coleman put the crosshairs on the deer鈥檚 shoulder and pulled the trigger. The deer bolted straight ahead.

鈥淚 dropped my magazine, emptied the chamber and walked down there,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 find any blood.鈥

Coleman called State Lands鈥 Hayden Peacock, who helps facilitate the hunting on the grounds, for help in locating the buck.

鈥淚 told Mr. Peacock that I got a good hit on him,鈥 Coleman said. 鈥淗e came down and we looked for 15 minutes. I showed him the video, and he kept walking until he finally found a speck of blood. Then we found a splatter here and there.鈥

The two decided to split up to continue the search, and it wasn鈥檛 long before Coleman found another piece of evidence of which way the deer went. 

鈥淚 said, 鈥楳an, there鈥檚 a pine tree knocked over right here,鈥欌欌 he said. 鈥淭hen we walked right up on him. I think Mr. Peacock was more excited than I was. I鈥檓 so glad they鈥檝e got these opportunities for us, being disabled, especially being a retired disabled Navy vet. I鈥檝e been coming twice a year since 2017. I love it.鈥

Doss said as good as Coleman鈥檚 buck was, he thinks the Field Trial Area has the potential to yield more big bucks this year and in years to come.

鈥淏efore the season is out, I expect to see another one or two like that,鈥 Doss said. 鈥淭here are some really large specimens on that area. Coleman鈥檚 deer was a real stud.鈥

Commissioner Blankenship agreed the Field Trial Area has big buck habitat.

鈥淚t has some swampy areas that we are leaving uncut and wild, so we have habitat for the deer,鈥 Commissioner Blankenship said. 鈥淪eeing these big deer shows how effective we have been managing for different species. Diversifying the use of the property for multiple user groups is good for the public.鈥

In addition to the physically disabled hunts, the Field Trial Area hosts a series of youth hunts, which are typically scheduled on Wednesdays and Saturdays unless there is a conflict with a national sporting dog event. The area has 14 green fields for the youth hunts, and the fields are rotated to limit the pressure on the deer. 

Doss or one of his team places the youth hunters in the stands for the morning hunt.

鈥淜ids can come there with the expectation of seeing the biggest deer they鈥檝e ever seen in their lives,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e have deer on field cameras that are giants. We don鈥檛 overload the place so we can maintain the quality.鈥

Doss said kids who are selected through the random draw process for the duck hunts can expect a similar experience.

鈥淲e鈥檙e really working hard on converting some of the commercial catfish ponds into moist soil management for ducks,鈥 he said. 鈥淪tate Lands Conservation Officer David Hopper has been working really hard on that. We鈥檙e making real good progress on that.

鈥淪ome of the duck hunts are phenomenal. It鈥檚 not just wood ducks. We have mallards, gadwalls, you name it. We鈥檙e on the edge of the Tombigbee River flyway. There are commercial catfish operations all around us, and we鈥檙e manipulating our place for a food source. We鈥檙e really a honey hole for ducks.鈥

Doss said State Lands鈥 commitment to habitat work has resulted in the success rates of deer and duck hunters.

鈥淲e were in a situation where we were doing a lot of bush hogging and now, we鈥檙e in a prescribed burn rotation,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e leave some areas fallow before we burn. When it was a cattle ranch, the limiting factor was lack of cover. We鈥檙e manipulating the habitat to provide cover. We鈥檙e also answering the Forever Wild call for our native grasses. We are actively working to turn some old cow pastures into native grasses. By using fire instead of a bush hog, we have a tremendous amount of native grasses that are really showing out.鈥

Director McCurdy echoed Commissioner Blankenship on what the new event center and pavilion are going to mean to the Field Trial Area.

鈥淚n addition to helping us accommodate ADCNR鈥檚 youth and collegiate programs, the event complex will provide meeting space and generally support all aspects of what the sporting dog groups need to conduct various training and competition event activities,鈥 McCurdy said. 鈥淭his will give us the capacity to draw more national events. It鈥檚 going to make us a destination in the sporting dog world.鈥

鈥淓ven with our currently limited infrastructure, this unique property is already being recognized as a national event venue. We will be serving as the host site for both the AKC National Gun Dog Championship and the AKC National Vizsla Gun Dog Championship over the next couple of months. Once completed, the new event complex will raise the Field Trial Area鈥檚 national profile and bring in even more visitors to surrounding communities.鈥

The education aspect of the Field Trial Area involves ADCNR鈥檚 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries Division and its Campus Conservation Program, headed by Sgt. Bill Freeman. Some of the colleges and universities participating in the program include Auburn University, Tuskegee University, Montevallo University, 黑料天堂 A&M University, 黑料天堂 State University, Jacksonville State University, the University of 黑料天堂-Huntsville and Calhoun Community College. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e bringing in biology major college students from institutions across 黑料天堂 to the Field Trial Area, giving them a taste of the habitat work in the duck ponds and prescribed fire,鈥 Doss said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e also bringing them in for things like a duck hunt or fishing event. Some of these students who are going into these biology and wildlife programs don鈥檛 have actual experience in the outdoors. We鈥檙e finding those students. Bill and I have worked very closely on this. We鈥檙e bringing these students out and letting them get their hands dirty.鈥

From January 31 through February 8, the AKC National Gun Dog Championship will showcase pointing dogs from all over the nation competing for titles. 

The Campus Conservation Program will be at the Field Trial Area from January 24-26, while youth deer, youth duck and physically disabled hunts are set for January 25. On January 29, youth deer and physically disabled hunts are scheduled.

鈥淓very Wednesday and Saturday, I鈥檓 waiting to hear about a youngster killing a monster,鈥 Doss said. 鈥淭hese pictures of deer and the deer these hunters have taken make this place a phenomenal youth hunting area. I think it鈥檚 the best youth hunting place in the Southeast, easy.鈥

###

 

Abbagail Bagby had a successful outing on one of the Field Trial Area Youth Hunts. ADCNR photo