Seeing Tapirs in Texas: An Exotic Wildlife Encounter That Still Blows My Mind

I was driving slowly down a winding farm to market road during one of our Higher Calling Wildlife® expeditions for kids, scanning the landscape the way I always do.

The Hill Country was quiet that day, limestone hills rolling away under a pale sky, live oaks scattered like old sentinels. We had a family with us — a father, his brother-in-law, and two boys and the conversation inside the vehicle was relaxed, focused on native exotic wildlife we expected to see.

Then I slammed on the brakes.

I pointed across the road and told everyone to look — now — because behind the fence on the other side was something no one on that road would ever be able to top in terms of strange animal sightings.

Standing there, calm and unmistakable, was a pair of tapirs.

The two tapirs I photographed in 2020.

For a moment, no one spoke. The boys leaned forward. The adults squinted. And then came the same reaction I felt myself: disbelief followed by certainty. These weren’t hogs. They weren’t exotic cattle. They weren’t something that could be explained away with a shrug. They were tapirs.

This wasn’t a low fence or a small enclosure. The animals were behind a high-fence game ranch, but one that encompassed thousands of acres. The terrain behind them stretched far into the Hill Country, rugged and expansive, not the kind of place where animals are casually displayed or easily noticed. The tapirs looked healthy. Relaxed. At home.

For readers unfamiliar with them, tapirs are large, primitive mammals that resemble a cross between a pig and a small elephant. They have stocky bodies, short legs, and a distinctive flexible snout that functions almost like a tiny trunk.

They’re native to Central and South America and parts of Southeast Asia, where they live in dense forests and near water. They are shy, largely nocturnal animals, powerful swimmers, and rarely seen even in their native range. That’s what makes encountering a pair of tapirs in the Texas Hill Country so unsettling — not just because they’re exotic, but because they’re the last animals anyone expects to see standing quietly along a Texas road.

The sighting happened in 2020, and it stayed with me long after we drove on. Not because it was shocking, but because it was real. Everyone in that vehicle saw the same thing. No argument. No confusion. No embellishment. Just two animals that did not belong on any official list of what you’re supposed to see along a Texas road.

Texas has one of the largest exotic wildlife populations in North America, but most people only know the familiar ones. Axis deer and blackbuck antelope have become so common on Hill Country roads that many drivers barely give them a second look.

Those animals are just the surface. Scattered across private ranches are animals few Texans — and even fewer visitors — ever encounter: bongo antelope, eland, Cape buffalo, and other species typically associated with Africa, not limestone hills and cedar breaks. These animals live behind fences, often on massive properties, and remain largely invisible unless you happen to be in the right place at the right time. Apparently, that list now includes tapirs.

A bongo. There are growing numbers of them on exotic ranches in Texas.

I returned to that area in 2021 and didn’t see them. I assumed the moment had passed — a one-time encounter, filed away among the strange but unrepeatable experiences that come with spending a lifetime outdoors. Then, in 2025, I went back again, and there they were. In the same general area. Along the same stretch of road. As solid and unmistakable as before. This time, I took a photograph — the one I’ll be posting with this article. Not because I needed proof for myself, but because I knew how impossible this would sound to anyone who hadn’t seen it with their own eyes. Of all the exotic animals I’ve encountered, this remains the strangest.

That same trip delivered another reminder of how fluid wildlife reality can be in this state. In the Edwards Plateau, I saw a free-ranging elk — not behind a fence, not confined, but moving through Hill Country habitat. Growing elk populations in Texas are something I’ve written about before, and this sighting fit a quiet but expanding pattern. It wasn’t shocking. It was simply confirmation that animals move, adapt, and establish themselves long before we’re ready to update the narrative.

Rob Moore sent us this photo of a free-ranging elk near Roosevelt, TX.

Over the years, I’ve followed up on countless strange animal reports. Some lead nowhere. Others lead to surprises. One of the most memorable involved a report of a kangaroo on private property in East Texas. I went to investigate the very next day, expecting a misunderstanding. Instead, I found kangaroo tracks — clean impressions, clear movement patterns, no doubt about what made them. Texas, it turns out, is home to far more kangaroos and wallabies than most people realize — legally owned, privately kept, and occasionally wandering where they shouldn’t be.

I’ve even received a report of an elephant in Henderson County. That one was almost certainly an escape, but it reinforced the same truth. You never know what people are going to see. And sometimes, they’re right.

The outdoors has taught me one thing over and over again: certainty is fragile. Animals appear where we don’t expect them. They persist quietly. They adapt. They move. Whether it’s tapirs behind a Hill Country fence, elk moving through plateau country, kangaroos leaving tracks in East Texas soil, or even an elephant wandering where it clearly shouldn’t be, the land continues to surprise those who pay attention.

That day on the farm to market road, with two boys staring wide-eyed out the window, I was reminded why these experiences matter. Not because they’re rare. Not because they’re unbelievable. But because they remind us that the natural world is far less tidy — and far more interesting — than any list, map, or expectation we’ve drawn for it.

And sometimes, the most unforgettable wildlife sightings happen when you least expect them — just beyond a fence, on a road you’ve driven a hundred times before.

Chester Moore

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A French Bulldog Or A Mountain Lion?

A recent report of a possible mountain lion near Sacramento International Airport turned out to be something very different. According to KCRA, the animal spotted lying in a muddy canal was not a cougar at all, but an abandoned French bulldog.

The dog was rescued and taken to a shelter after wildlife responders determined it had likely been dumped. While the story quickly went viral, it also highlighted a familiar issue in wildlife reporting: misidentification.

When you think of animals that look like a mountain it’s of course the French bulldog.

But misidentification doesn’t mean reports should be dismissed outright. It means they should be verified.

That distinction matters when discussing mountain lions, especially outside the western United States. In many regions, cougars are still considered absent based on official range maps. When sightings occur outside those boundaries, they are often written off immediately.

Sometimes that’s justified. Sometimes it isn’t.

I recently documented clear photographic evidence of mountain lions outside the accepted range, taken in East Texas. These images are not folklore or rumor. They are photographs evaluated in context with known mountain lion anatomy, behavior, and dispersal patterns.

I break down the evidence and what it does and does not suggest — in this video:

Mountain Lions Where They’re Not Supposed to Be (Photographic Evidence from East Texas)
👉Click here to watch.

The Sacramento case ended with a dog being rescued because someone took a report seriously enough to investigate. That same principle applies everywhere.

Verification matters.

Chester Moore

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‘Twas The Night Before Christmas (At Duck Camp)

This fun rendition of the Christmas classic is something I wrote years back and I hope you enjoy.

‘Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the camp
Not a creature was stirring, not even a lab.
The socks they hung by the chimney with care,
In hopes that St. Nicholas soon would be there.

The young sportsmen were nestled all snug in their beds,
While visions of redfish swam through their heads.
And mamma in camo, and I neatly matched,
Had just settled down for a long winter’s nap.

When out on the marsh there arose such a clatter,
I jumped from the bed to see what was the matter.
Away to the window I flew like a teal,
Tore open the shutters and to see what is the deal.

The moon hitting down on the strong tidal flow
Gave the luster of mid-day to objects below.
When, what my weary eyes did spy
Eight tiny gators and a pirogue in sky.

With a little old driver, so lively and quick,
I knew in a moment it must be St. Nick.
More rapid than widgeons his gators they came,
And he whistled, and shouted, and called them by name.

“Now, Boudreaux! now, Trahan! now, Broussard and Comeaux!
On, Bergeron! on Savoy! on, Dugas and Thibodeaux!
To the top of the camp! to the top of the wall!
Slither away! Slither! Slither away all!”

As dry leaves that before the blue norther do fly,
When they meet with an obstacle, mount to the sky.
So above the pilings-top the coursers they flew,
With the sleigh full of prizes, and St. Nicholas too.

And then, in a twinkling, I heard on the roof
The prancing and clawing of each reptile foot.
As I drew in my hand, and was turning around,
Down the chimney, St. Nicholas came with a bound.

He was dressed all in muskrat, from his head to his foot,
And his clothes were all tarnished with mud and soot.
A bundle of decoys he had flung on his back,
And he looked like a hunter just opening his pack.

He had a broad face and a little round gut,
That shook, when he laughed like an out of shape mutt.
He was chubby and plump, a right jolly old elf,
And quickly spied the bowl on the shelf.

He took to the gumbo like a dog to a bone
Read the note we had left him next to the phone.
He then filled all the stockings with lanyards and masks
Left all new presents then was done with the task.

And laying his finger aside of his nose,
And giving a nod, up the chimney he rose.
He sprang to his sleigh, to his team gave a call,
And away they all slithered through the marsh they did crawl.

But I heard him exclaim, when he was out of sight,
“Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good-night.”

Chester Moore

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Charged by Chupacabra – The Weird Story of A Very Real Animal

For decades, people across Texas and the Southwest have reported strange hairless creatures attacking livestock — animals many claimed were the legendary Chupacabra.

But the real explanation is just a strange and we have it on my latest YouTube video.

Plus, you’ll hear about the night he was charged by a “chupacabra”. Watch it here.

In this Dark Outdoors® video episode and wildlife investigatio cross-over I break down the true wildlife science behind “Chupacabra” sightings and shows how coyotes, foxes, raccoons — and even bears — suffering from severe mange can transform into nightmarish creatures.

You’ll see:

What coyotes with mange REALLY look like

Why mange causes extreme hair loss, blackened skin, and deformities

How predators change behavior when sick, making them seem “mysterious” or “unnatural”

The difference between myth, hoax, and legitimate wildlife cases

This was an interesting topic to tackle and it’s one that will probably generate some controversy because I do believe there is a pretty simple solution to a very strange legend.

Chester Moore

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Healing Happens in the Wild Places

Today is Giving Tuesday, and we’re inviting you to be part of something truly life-changing.

Two weeks ago, the 300th child came through our Wild Wishes® program—a milestone that represents hundreds of young lives touched with hope, encouragement, and the healing power of wildlife. Many of these kids have faced deep trauma, loss, or ongoing hardship. Wild Wishes® grants wildlife encounters to hurting children, creating moments of joy and wonder that often open the door to emotional and spiritual healing.

You can donate here.

But Wild Wishes® is only one part of our mission.

For nearly seven years, Higher Calling Wildlife has been leading transformative wildlife expeditions with kids across the country—Colorado, Wyoming, Tennessee, Texas, Arkansas, and Florida. These trips provide powerful outdoor experiences, Christ-centered mentorship, and the chance for kids to encounter God’s creation in unforgettable ways. The mountains, forests, coastlines, and wild spaces we explore become places where hope is restored and purpose takes root.

Watch our mini-documentary on that program here.

We also serve countless youth in foster care through other facets of our ministry, offering support, encouragement, and opportunities many would never otherwise receive.

This year, however, we’re behind on donations compared to recent years. To continue saying “yes” to every child who needs us—and to start 2026 strong—we are asking for your support.

Your tax-deductible Giving Tuesday gift will:

  • Help us grant more Wild Wishes® encounters to hurting kids
  • Equip us to serve children in foster care through specialized outreach programs
  • Support ongoing Higher Calling wildlife expeditions and mentorship
  • Allow us to reach more kids for Christ through our wildlife-based ministry
  • Ensure no child is turned away due to funding

Every donation, big or small, makes a direct impact. You can bring encouragement, hope, and unforgettable wildlife experiences to children who desperately need them.

Thank you for standing with us and helping transform young lives—one wild wish at a time.

You can make a tax-deductible donation here.

Chester Moore

Black Coyotes Are Increasing — Is Old Wolf DNA Reawakening?

Black coyotes are being spotted more often across the South and beyond and the mystery behind their dark coats goes much deeper than most people realize.

In this wildlife investigation, Chester Moore explores the hidden connection between black coyotes and the history of the American red wolf. For decades, biologists have known that coyotes in certain regions carry old wolf genes.

Watch our new black coyote video investigation here.

But why are black coyotes showing up more frequently?

And could this be tied to the lingering genetic legacy of the red wolf — once nearly wiped out from the wild?

In this episode, we examine:

*Rising black coyote sightings Game camera footage revealing unusual behaviors

*The science behind melanism in coyotes How red wolf DNA persists in modern coyote populations

*What this means for wildlife genetics and conservation

*Why the “ghost wolf” may not be as gone as once believed

This is one of the most fascinating wildlife mysteries happening right now and the clues are showing up in backyards, ranches, forests, and trail cams across the country.

Subscribe to our YouTube channel for more wildlife investigations, field mysteries, and groundbreaking reporting from Chester Moore.

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Why Great White Sharks Moving Toward the Gulf Right Now Matters — And Why I’ve Spent Years Investigating Them

For years, most people have accepted the idea that great white sharks simply don’t enter the Gulf of Mexico. It’s a belief repeated so often it became “fact.”

But as new movement data rolls in right now, reality is proving to be far more mysterious — and far more fascinating.

NEW VIDEO: My Deep-Dive Investigation (Cilck here on video Embed below)

I just released a new YouTube episode breaking down today’s southbound movements and the hidden history of great whites in the Gulf that most people have never heard.

👉 Watch the full video here:
Great White Sharks Are Returning to the Gulf Right Now! Hidden History Revealed
(Insert your link)

This episode shares rare historical information I’ve uncovered, along with why these current movements matter.

Why This Story Matters

Higher Calling has always been about looking deeper — seeking truth, connection, and meaning in the natural world.
Great white sharks remind us how vast creation is, and how little we truly understand.

When animals appear where we don’t expect them, it challenges our assumptions and reminds us:

  • nature is full of surprises
  • our knowledge is incomplete
  • and wildlife stories often contain hidden layers
My Long History Investigating Great Whites

Long before Higher Calling existed, I spent years researching and writing about great whites, documenting:

  • historical Gulf sightings
  • rare Texas-related reports
  • archival notes and forgotten catches
  • science on long-distance movements
  • stories from fishermen and coastal residents

None of this research was about sensationalism. It was about following the evidence and respecting the complexity of God’s creation.

The Gulf Connection

The Gulf of Mexico has always held mysteries — rare wildlife appearances, unexpected migrations, and natural patterns that defy easy explanations.

Look close and you will see a 12-foot great white shark in the water! This is when I had the privilege of going on the water with the Atlantic White Shark Conservancy in 2024.

During this time of year, great whites commonly move south along the Atlantic, and occasionally their paths bring them close to the Gulf.
It doesn’t mean large numbers are entering the region, but it does mean the Gulf is part of a bigger ecological story than most people realize.

The Higher Calling Perspective

Whether we’re talking about mountain wildlife, coastal mysteries, or conservation ethics, the heart of Higher Calling stays the same:

To honor creation.
To seek truth.
And to inspire others to look deeper.

That’s why this great white movement matters now — because it rekindles awe and curiosity, and that sense of wonder draws us closer to understanding creation and the One who made it.

More stories like this are coming soon as we continue exploring the wild, the meaningful, and the rarely told.

Chester Moore

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Warthogs in Texas Are Increasing — And Red River Hogs Are on the Radar! Exclusive Photos

Something unusual is happening in Texas. Sightings of warthogs are increasing, and now there are credible reports of Red River Hogs (“Congo Hogs” or “Tufted Pigs”) appearing as well.

Watch my exclusive video with new photo evidence here.

These brightly colored African hogs were never meant to be in the Lone Star State, yet we have exclusive proof they are in Texas and in the wild.

In this investigation, I reveal exclusive photos, look at where these reports are coming from, explore the history of exotic hogs in Texas, and explain why these species may be gaining a foothold. Texas already has wild hog problems — but this is a new chapter.

Subscribe to my YouTube channel for more wildlife investigations and field-based reporting.

I’ve always been fascinated with hogs and have written extensively on them here. Check out this past post about white feral hogs.

In Case You Missed It!

A man was attacked by a giant catfish and I personally interviewed him and saw the massive scar on his back!

This month marks the 20th anniversary of my groundbreaking investigation into truly giant catfish— mysterious creatures that continue to blur the line between science and legend. From murky depths to late-night campfire tales, these fish have become modern myths that just might be real.

Watch the video by clicking here!

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Man Attacked by Giant Catfish! (Video)

A man was attacked by a giant catfish and I personally interviewed him and saw the massive scar on his back!

This month marks the 20th anniversary of my groundbreaking investigation into truly giant catfish— mysterious creatures that continue to blur the line between science and legend. From murky depths to late-night campfire tales, these fish have become modern myths that just might be real.

Watch the video by clicking here!

Watch the video to see the footage and hear the story in full detail.

The catfish attack was a strange sidebar in a story that was (and still is) very interesting to cover and investigate in person.

A super fun was part was I found myself diving alongside “Splash,” the world-record blue catfish housed at the Texas Freshwater Fisheries Center in Athens, Texas. At the time, I was chasing every lead I could on reports of monster catfish lurking in reservoirs and beneath massive dams — stories that had spooked divers for decades.

Have you ever heard the old tales of divers surfacing pale and trembling, refusing to go back under because of what they saw?

I decided to find out the truth for myself — and along the way, I still can’t believe I met a man who had actually been attacked by one of these massive fish.

Watch the video to discover the full story — and decide for yourself whether these river giants are merely fish tales… or something far more extraordinary.

Chester Moore

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Micro Deer: Whitetail Bucks The Size of Coyotes (New Video!)

I’ll never forget the first time my Uncle Jackie told me about the little buck he saw.

We were sitting around after a long day of hunting in the Texas Hill Country, the fire crackling low and mesquite smoke hanging in the air.

He leaned forward, eyes bright, and asked, “You ever seen a deer no taller than a Labrador — full rack, mature, but small as a dog?”

He was dead serious.

“It was in San Saba County,” he said.

“Saw him twice. Little eight-point buck, looked perfect — just tiny.”

For a boy who’d grown up in Orange County, where I didn’t see a deer until I was twelve, that story was pure magic. I couldn’t shake it. A perfectly formed, full-grown whitetail the size of a coyote? It sounded like a legend, the kind of thing old hunters whisper about around campfires.

Watch the new video where I examine these deer in depth.

Years later, after Uncle Jackie passed, I brought it up at his funeral.
I asked my dad, “Did Uncle Jackie ever tell you about that little deer he saw out near San Saba?”

Dad looked at me and said quietly, “I saw one of those deer too. Same lease.”

That moment stopped me. Two sightings, from two men I trusted completely. Maybe, I thought, there really were micro whitetails out there — real, wild deer that somehow slipped beneath the radar of science and common experience.

A Biologist’s Confirmation

Years later, I shared that story with my friend Larry Weishuhn — one of the most respected wildlife biologists and whitetail experts in North America.

Larry, often called “Mr. Whitetail”, has spent decades studying deer populations, from genetics to disease, and has seen just about everything with antlers.

When I told him about my uncle’s story, he smiled and said, “Well, I believe you — because I’ve seen one too.”

Key deer photo by Faith Moore.

Back in the 1970s, Larry was working as a wildlife disease specialist under contract with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and Texas A&M’s Department of Veterinary Pathology. His team was collecting deer across central Texas — in San Saba and Llano Counties — to study nutrition, blood chemistry, and general herd health.

“One day,” Larry told me, “I saw a small buck standing by himself. From a distance he just looked young, but when I got closer I realized something was different. He was full-bodied, mature — but small. I shot him as part of the sampling work, and when I walked up to him, I realized he wasn’t more than fifty or sixty pounds. That’s about the size of a collie dog. But anatomically, he was a perfect whitetail — full antlers, fully developed.”

Larry’s team collected tissue and blood samples from that deer, expecting maybe to find a disease or deformity. But everything came back normal.

“It was a healthy deer. Not malnourished, not sick — just small. A true micro version of a whitetail,” he said.

When Nature Experiments

So what causes something like that?

Larry believes it’s likely a rare genetic phenomenon, perhaps dwarfism or a form of line breeding that can occur in small or isolated populations.

“Sometimes when populations are heavily hunted or isolated, you can get very tight gene pools. And when that happens, certain traits can express themselves, including reduced size,” he said.

“It’s similar to what happened in cattle when they used to line-breed Herefords and Angus too closely they would start getting dwarf calves that never grew to normal size.”

He paused, then added, “And of course, nature can throw a wild card every now and then. Just like in humans, sometimes chromosomes align in a certain way, and you get something extraordinary.”

This trail camera photo was submitted by reader Alonzo circa 2019 well before A.I. was a thing. Look at that tiny buck in the foreground.

Larry compared that San Saba micro buck to a Carmen Mountain whitetail, one of the smallest subspecies of deer in North America, which inhabit the desert mountain ranges of West Texas and northern Mexico.

“In size, they were nearly identical. But the genetics were pure whitetail — no subspecies difference,” he said.

That scientific perspective grounded the mystery for me. These weren’t mythical forest sprites or photoshopped oddities but genuine genetic deviations, part of the endless experiment that is nature itself.

Separating Myth From Fact

Over the years, I’ve seen countless photos online claiming to show “the world’s tiniest whitetail.”

Most are fakes or, more commonly, muntjac deer, an exotic species from Asia that reaches only forty pounds as an adult. I’ve handled a six-week-old muntjac fawn myself during this investigation. They were adorable, yes, but not a whitetail.

The author with a muntjac baby.

True “micro” whitetails are vanishingly rare, and the ones I’ve seen documented are scattered across ordinary deer herds, not a distinct subspecies, but rather isolated cases of genetics playing with the blueprint.

One of the most compelling photos I’ve ever received came from a reader named Alonzo. His game camera captured a little buck with forked antlers standing before a full-grown doe. No trick of perspective, no digital tampering. Just a tiny deer living among the rest — a real, living mystery.

Lessons From The Key Deer

Whenever I think about these miniature whitetails, my mind goes to the Key deer which are the smallest officially recognized subspecies of whitetail, found only in the Florida Keys.

Adult Key deer weigh as little as 55–75 pounds and stand barely 30 inches tall. Once nearly wiped out by hunting and habitat loss, they’ve clawed their way back from the brink thanks to protection under the Endangered Species Act.

Their story is one of adaptation with an entire population that adapted to fit its island home.

But the micro whitetails Larry and I have researched are something different. They’re not adapted to survive smaller — they just are. They exist on the outer edge of biological possibility, a reminder that even within a well-known species, nature still has secrets.

The Wonder In Small Things

As I reflect on these stories, from my uncle’s campfire memory to Larry’s scientific encounter, I’m struck by the lesson these tiny deer carry.

In an age where we think we’ve seen it all, where every acre seems mapped and every species catalogued, nature still surprises us. The Key deer remind us how smallness can be a strength. The micro whitetails remind us that sometimes, mystery itself is part of nature’s design.

Larry said it best.

“Chester, that little deer was a regular whitetail — just small. Perfectly normal in every way but size. That’s what makes it so fascinating. Nature doesn’t always follow our rules.”

And maybe that’s the greatest wonder of all, that even in the most familiar species, there are still stories waiting to be discovered. Not everything wild fits into a category. Some things like that little San Saba buck are meant to keep us curious.

Chester Moore

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