Owl Creek Farm
Owl Creek Farm is located in Southwest Oklahoma, approximately eight miles west of the small town of Mountain Park. It consists of a 480-acre tract of farmland and forest. Owl Creek is heavily forested and runs through the center of the farm, about a half-mile from the North Fork of the Red River. Deer and other wildlife take refuge here during the day. It is not uncommon to see herds of anywhere from ten to twenty deer coming out of the forest to graze on the wheat. Feral swine come up from the river area quite often. Coveys of quail are few and far between, as is the situation common in this area. Doves are plentiful, as are coyotes.
We look forward to hosting you!
Owl Creek Farm is located in Southwest Oklahoma, approximately eight miles west of the small town of Mountain Park. It consists of a 480-acre tract of farmland and forest. Owl Creek is heavily forested and runs through the center of the farm, about a half-mile from the North Fork of the Red River. Deer and other wildlife take refuge here during the day. It is not uncommon to see herds of anywhere from ten to twenty deer coming out of the forest to graze on the wheat. Feral swine come up from the river area quite often. Coveys of quail are few and far between, as is the situation common in this area. Doves are plentiful, as are coyotes.
We look forward to hosting you!
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Available Packages
Frequently Asked Questions
Property Access & Ground Rules
- Check In: After 4:00 AM
- Check Out: Before 9:00 PM
- Nearby Interstate: 20+ miles
- Nearby Highway: 0-10 miles
- Nearby Airport: 20+ miles
- Campfires: Not allowed
- Pets: Not allowed on property
- ATV's: Not allowed
- Parking: Yes
- Vehicles: 2 Allowed
- Drive-in Access: Yes
- Walk-in Access: Yes
- Guests: 4 Allowed
Reviews (2)
5.0- STSam T
Did see any hogs on my trip but had a great time saw a lot of deer so will be back once deer season is open.host was very helpful and kind
Reviewed by Guest on October 2023 - DDDirck D
We had a great time hunting Mr John’s property! Mr. John was very welcoming and hospitable. He was very informative about his property and he has a great life story! Thank you for your service Mr. John!!
Reviewed by Guest on November 2023
Landowner
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The night I graduated from high school I was on my way to the reception station for the Army. In short order I became an Infantry soldier, then a paratrooper, then a Green Beret. Four tours in Vietnam, two Silver Stars and several of what we always called the V.C. Marksmanship Medal (Purple Heart), several missions in the Middle East and Central and South America and after 22 years of such fun and games I retired, thinking I'd find a job in corporate America. No such luck. So for the next 25 years I was a contractor, doing the same things but getting far better pay. I'm still active in that field. So I know of what I write.
Along the way I started writing, finding to my amazement there were people out there who might want to read what I wrote. Days of Fire came first, then the Men of Valor trilogy Napalm Dreams, Into the Treeline, Bayonet Skies. I was contacted by a media person who asked me to write a couple of scripts for the Soldier of Fortune TV show, and that was followed by a gig as a consultant for a video game, titled the same. Then I became the name and face for Soldier of Fortune I and II. Interrupted by Desert Storm when the Army once again needed my services, I stopped writing for a while. A few years later and I was bouncing around the Stans. Deciding that I was getting a little old for this stuff, I went back to writing. In the Apache County series I took the main characters from the Men of Valor and explored what it would be like to have a special operations type become a law enforcement officer. Five books in the series, and more to come.
The night I graduated from high school I was on my way to the reception station for the Army. In short order I became an Infantry soldier, then a paratrooper, then a Green Beret. Four tours in Vietnam, two Silver Stars and several of what we always called the V.C. Marksmanship Medal (Purple Heart), several missions in the Middle East and Central and South America and after 22 years of such fun and games I retired, thinking I'd find a job in corporate America. No such luck. So for the next 25 years I was a contractor, doing the same things but getting far better pay. I'm still active in that field. So I know of what I write.
Along the way I started writing, finding to my amazement there were people out there who might want to read what I wrote. Days of Fire came first, then the Men of Valor trilogy Napalm Dreams, Into the Treeline, Bayonet Skies. I was contacted by a media person who asked me to write a couple of scripts for the Soldier of Fortune TV show, and that was followed by a gig as a consultant for a video game, titled the same. Then I became the name and face for Soldier of Fortune I and II. Interrupted by Desert Storm when the Army once again needed my services, I stopped writing for a while. A few years later and I was bouncing around the Stans. Deciding that I was getting a little old for this stuff, I went back to writing. In the Apache County series I took the main characters from the Men of Valor and explored what it would be like to have a special operations type become a law enforcement officer. Five books in the series, and more to come.
Location
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