Bayside, TX Refugio Country Land 256.950000 acre for sale in Bayside, Texas

$899,325

256.95 +/- acres fronting Copano Bay. This tract is divided in to 2 parcels being separated by FM 136. The parcels consists of 192.029 acres located on the west side of FM 136 and the remaining 62.41 acres being situated on the east side of FM 136. This offers each tract with approx. 2,100' of Texas State FM road frontage.
Copano Bay is situated in Texas, simply west of Rockport off Refugio and Aransas counties. The bay is surrounded by flat, marshy surface emerged by sand and dark clays that support mesquite and grasses. The location is home to numerous migratory and leisure birds including whooping cranes, royal and gull-billed terns, black-necked stilts, roseate spoonbills, reddish egrets, white-faced ibis, seaside sparrows, brown pelicans, mottled ducks, black-bellied whistling-ducks and herons. Famous attractions here consist of the Copano Bay State Fishing Pier, which is a 0.02 sq km concession-operated state park. Others include Goose Island and Matagorda Bay.
Fishing:.
The northeast end of Copano Bay around the Turtle Pen Lake location has a substantial flat that draws great numbers of trout. The very best months to fly fish this location are early summer. The fishing picks up once again in the fall. The northeast shoreline of Copano Bay has hard sand bottoms and is a prime wadefishing area.
The coastline from Redfish Point south toward the community of Copano Village provides exceptional wadefishing for redfish and trout over tough sand bottoms with scattered shell and yard beds in troughs. Waders also need to inspect the series of little estuaries that open to the bay through little cuts. Simply off this shoreline are shoals that also hold fish.
The Copano Bay shoreline around Rattlesnake Point likewise provides excellent wadefishing for trout and redfish over hard sand bottoms. A series of tidal marshes and little lakes to the south of Rattlesnake Point including Pete's Bend, James's Bend, and Italian Bend draw excellent varieties of redfish, black drum, and go to pieces. This area is rich in shrimp and forage fish, with bountiful marshy flats that draw in gamefish. Many of these marshes are fronted by personal property and in many cases can be accessed just by boat.
Searching:.
The home provides abundant duck and geese activity along with other native wildlife throughout the area for hunting opportunities.
Aquatic greenery:.
Marsh, mesquite and yards.
Environment:.
Copano Bay works as a baby room for shrimp, which brings in a a great deal of redfish. Bountiful collections of Black drum, Flounder and Trout, can likewise be found in the bay. Oysters grow in great deals to form elongated reefs "oriented perpendicular to tidal flow" in the estuary. The reefs supply habitat for fish and sustenance for a large variety of birds including the Black-bellied Whistling-duck, Black-necked Stilt, Brown Pelican, Gull-billed tern, Reddish Egret, Roseate Spoonbill, Seaside Sparrow, White-faced Ibis and the Whooping Crane.
This home lies about 25 miles from Port Aransas and 35 miles from Corpus Christi.