Wow, never done that before

Brad Bortner

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During a recent social visit, I was asked by a family friend if I?d like to see a duck decoy that his father had been given years before. I said sure. We walked into the living room and there it sat on a side table. I knew what it was when I saw it but had to ask if I was correct. He even let me pick it up and handle it. I thought others here might enjoy it almost as much as I did. I didn?t take pictures of the two miniature Canada geese by the same carver they had as well.

Yes, they know what they have and the approximate value and no I didn?t run out the door with it.

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Great post for having such a clickbait post title :).

Very neat and what a great decoy with a super pose. thanks for sharing that. Talk about a sweet decoy.

That brand cracks me up how half assed it is given the decoy.
 
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tod osier said:
Great post for having such a clickbait post title :).

Very neat and what a great decoy with a super pose. thanks for sharing that. Talk about a sweet decoy.

That brand cracks me up how half assed it is given the decoy.

[angelic] Tod, it wasn?t click bait, cuz it was true. I?ve never handled a decoy that worth that much money.
 

Crowells' work have the oval, and the rectangular brand. He and his son Cleon.

In the early 80's. A person could go into many a decoy dealers room at the Ohio show, see and touch decoys worth mighty sums today. That is about as close as I ever got to them. Other than in private collections. Ya can see em in museums, but ya can't touch em...


VP
 
Since some of us are kind of uninformed on decoy values, what would something like this be valued at? Curious minds and all?
 
I can't answer your question Mark, but pick a number and add 5 zeros behind it and you'll be in the ballpark.
 
Mark W said:
Since some of us are kind of uninformed on decoy values, what would something like this be valued at? Curious minds and all?

https://copleyart.hibid.com/lot/1988600/life-size-reaching-black-duck
 
Nice decoy. I had the oppotunity to visit a local decoy collection. It was a very nice collection with many high dollar pieces. They now sit in a museum that the late Jay Koetje built on his property. It's quite the collection of decoys, calls and other waterfowl relics.
 
I had a similar moment once with a bamboo fly rod. I was at an annual Maine event known as "Superboo" which was traditionally held on the Saturday before the Super Bowl and involved many bamboo rod makers, collectors, owners and fans gathering in a high school gym to fondle, cast, trade and sell bamboo rods. (Sadly, it no longer takes place. It was a great mid-winter diversion.)

One of the collectors I'd met in previous years, Sante Giuliani, handed me a rod and said, "You want to cast this. It's a cannon. You might want to take it out in the parking lot because the basketball court is too small for it to do its thing."

Sure enough, I took it out and I and a couple of friends proceeded to cast and pretty effortlessly hit 60 feet, and then cast with a double haul and dump most of a 90' fly line. We were all competent casters, but not used to casting like that, even with modern graphite rods. It was a cannon indeed.

We all trooped back into the gym. "Sante, this is a great rod! What is it?"

It turned out to be by a Detroit area rod maker from the mid 20th century named Morris Kushner, who was quite famous in trout fishing circles because he made a fly rod that could cast incredible distances and gave it as a gift to a famous judge/writer/fly fisherman named John Voelker, aka Robert Traver, the name he wrote under. He wrote two fine fishing books, Trout Madness and Trout Magic, but is most famous for Anatomy of a Murder, which was made into a very popular movie starring James Stewart, and made enough money that Voelker could retire, fish, and write books about trout fishing. In one of those books was a chapter with the title "Morris the Rod Maker" about how this fellow down in Detroit made him a rod that was so much better than anything else he had ever cast that it became his favorite for big water and long casts.

As it turned out, the rod we were all banging around with out in the parking lot was THE ACTUAL ROD that Morris Kushner had given to Voelker, which our collector friend had somehow acquired from his family after he died. We all figured it was worth more than any of our vehicles and some of our houses.

Sante's view: "It was made to cast. Neither Kushner nor Voelker would be happy to have it hanging on the wall or stashed in storage." I wouldn't be surprised f Sante actually fished that rod once or twice.

I actually had a bamboo rod making friend of mine take measurements of that rod's taper with calipers with the thought that he could build me a modern version, but when push came to shove I had him build me a more traditional trout rod on a conventional taper instead.
 
I and a couple of friends proceeded to cast and pretty effortlessly hit 60 feet, and then cast with a double haul and dump most of a 90' fly line.


I can relate to the rarity of this
 
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