Working decoy November

William Reinicke

Active member
Those that hunt your decoys, please post up pics, let’s show off them working decoys. Finally found some birds, was able to get a good hunt in. 30-40 mph winds back to the ramp made for a sketchy boat ride. At one point was just running with the bilge running. Probably the worst boat ride I’ve been involved in. The things we do for ducks sometimes….

Sent 6 decoys to a friend who is sending me proto duck calls. Pretty neat to hear about success being had over decoys made in my own shop. These are just beginner decoys…. Can only improve and get better over time hopefully.
 

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Great job! I for one would be very interested in how you flocked the decoy. Especially the blending on the side pockets. Very nice.
 
Great job! I for one would be very interested in how you flocked the decoy. Especially the blending on the side pockets. Very nice.
These are my first generation decoys. Basically just wanted to see if this was a passion I wanted to chase. Ive kind of fallen in love. Likely will redo all my mallards for the 25/26 season with custom master carves that I make molds of.

The side pocket comes from the mold. I use 2 part urethane 4lb density to cast my decoys. This decoy unlimited mold has a side pocket when casted and so it makes for a nice reference line when laying down the airbrushing. Blending is easy with an airbrush, just keep spraying colors over each other once you find desired look. I start with a dark thinner black line on the cast line, I then go back over it with a dark brown but I hold the air brush at a 45 degree angle pointed up. This keeps spray away from the flank area, and thats how I achieve that blending up into the gray but maintaining a sharp line between flank and side pocket.

As far as flocking, Don Mintz is the one who showed me this technique. Its double coated flocking. The adhesive for the flocking is just rustoleum gloss paint. Gray and black are the two colors I use to lay down the flocking. I will use 3 different flocking colors depending on species of bird, but generally gray and black are paint colors to achieve my flocking adhesive. Paint first coat, apply flocking with a sieve (dollar store ones are the best), let dry over night, come back and apply a second coat of rustoleum paint over the first flocking and then apply the second coat. Let dry for 2 days and then air brush right onto that second coat of flocking. Magic is in the second coat, feels almost like a soft sandpaper. So far very durable and I am abusing these decoys.

If you have any other questions, do not hesitate to reach out. Don can come in right behind me and probably explain better. He also has some birds that he leaves out all season in his yard with this same exact flocking concept and they hold up very well. Im a believer so far.
 
William gave a good description of how we do it. He's working with molded foamers, I'm working with carved and burlapped foamers. Molded foamers have somewhat of a shell, carved foamers do not, thus the addition of the burlap layers.

While transitions in color is primarily a product of airbrushing, there are parts of the flocking process that makes it work even better.

For the most part I flock the first coat on every decoy with goose grey flocking over smoke grey rustoleum. The reason we use gloss rustoleum is that it stays wet longer and makes it easier to get good adhesion. I've used water based flocking glue and solvent based flocking glue and none of them came close to rustoleum.

After I've done the first coat of flocking I'll go back with the second coat in sections of color like on this shoveler, then go on to airbrush with thinned rustoleum mixed colors.

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On occasion when you are using the same color of flocking like goose grey flocking on this wigeon I can use rustoleum gloss brown on the body and smoke grey on the head and flock it all at the same time giving the transition between head and body a seamless look.332384769_732152821752439_830557882131051039_n.jpg332359464_921182695975277_2739988511125909120_n.jpg

I left these wood ducks out on my water feature since March, they've been frozen, snowed and rained on, and sun and heat up to 110 last summer. Sun is hard on paint, but these still look great. The flank of the wood duck was done with oil based paint pens and that held up as well.IMG_4351.JPGIMG_4352.JPGIMG_4353.JPG

I flock and paint all of my decoys, not just because they are more effective, but the painted surface is stronger than just paint. This is not the same process that factories flock with.

This mallard was flocked grey body twice, head and rump black on a second coat and brown on the small patch of chest. All the transitions of color are airbrushed with rustoleum.
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Ill be back at it this weekend. Hunting a storm on sunday but might be forced to take Monday off from due to expected extreme winds. Got another review from my 6 decoys in NY. These have my version of a river keel that are also removable. Seems like they are doing what they were designed for.... moving with very little current or wind. The other decoys are oversized avian x decoys. Excited for future decoys as these are cast from a decoy unlimited mold. I think we can do better than this for the 25/26 season

 
Been a good November thus far. Rained all morning on us. Birds didn’t quite want to play where we set, but we got after a few. Could have been done in 10 min if we shot wigeon and gadwall and divers. But I’m just a little too picky and try and target my mallard and pintail. Told the young man I was with he didn’t have to be as picky as me, but he wanted mallard as bad as I did. Had to call it early to get off the water before the winds hit us, and a new toy got added to the fleet. Couldn’t hunt Monday due to extreme winds, so I did the worst job a waterfowler has to do…. Grass things up… UGH! Need one more bundle of yellow, and then I’ll go back and add some brownish reds to match what we have here. Not a lot, but just enough dark to break up all the yellow.

The new @Shannon kelly whistle got it done on the pintail. I’m not good at speaking Spanish or rolling my R’s, so this little whistle is a life saver for tricking the pintails.
 

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how are you liking those flocked decoys about now?
They work….. they work well. I still have yet to hunt the x. Too bad I’m not good with cameras or filming hunts, I bet 300-400 pintail worked all the way down to the water today. Had about 40-60 wigeon land in decoys. Mallard knew exactly where they wanted to be, so had to get on them with the calls but the few I grabbed were shot at 20 yards or less. They just weren’t looking at the decoys until I would get a few here and there to break away from their flocks.

Hate to say it tho…. The more I hunt over these ones, the more excited I am for next years decoys. Next years will be the real deal.
 
Here is a picture from teal season. Been out west but without any of my decoys. We are just getting started with our season so hopefully more pictures to come. These are black cork scrap pieces glued up. Hate to waste good cork.
 

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ScottCK, I hear you on the foam dust. It clings to everything, gets everywhere and then it's getting it into the washing machine. It doesn't come off in the washing machine, it ends up in the lint screen of the dryer. On the rare occasion my wife slips her black and dark grey Scheels uniform into the washer not knowing what I've already put in, it's not a good time with pink dust all over her dark uniform. It always cleans off in the lint screen, thankfully. I really have to get in the mood to carve anything, wood, cork or foam. I dress up like someone on a hazmat crew. I'm allergic to wood dust and add that to asthma and I end up with a respirator on, not a dust mask, safety classes, face shield, one of my hooded fishing shirts and I can stay fairly clean. What a career choice I made, at least the foam dust doesn't cause me health issues like wood does, however I still carve wood on occasion, I love it. I haven't duck hunted in four years now, so my working decoy photos are older.

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This is from an 870 express my wife bought for me 15 years ago or so. At the time I was shooting a 870 Wingmaster that my dad bought new for me when I was 16 years old, it was on sale for $79 and had beautiful walnut in the stock. However it only held 2 3/4 inch shells which was fine back in the lead shot days, but fell a bit short for shooting ducks with steel. My wife heard me complain about it all the time and bought me the express. Needless to say, for an artist, the plain wood stock on the express was less than inspiring, so I began to decorate it.

I hunted Kansas till I was 33 and moved to Idaho. I had shot a couple of black ducks, one in Kansas and one in Illinois, so I added that to the paintings on the stock since it was rare for me. The rest of the images were from birds as I collected them here in Idaho, the storm wigeon was actually my second one, the canvasback drake, sage grouse, pintail and california quail were all new birds to me from Idaho. I can remember the hunting story with each one of them. One of the great things about Idaho is we have a huge variety of birds here. I'd probably add a few more, but I no longer have the gun. My oldest son has it and we have been estranged for a long time, I'd be surprised if he didn't already sell it. I'm glad I took a photo of it. I have a camo Vinci now that my dad gave me before he died, not exactly a good canvas for painting on. I've been painting since 1967.

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Don

Those are wonderful. I love it when I have an opportunity to hunt with someone who adds a personal touch to their equipment. Yours are some of the better I've seen. A few years ago I asked a group of hunters what they had done to add their mark on their hunting gear and all they could come up with was mud and blood. You nailed it.
 
My wife keeps me in check, she's not nearly as impressed with my work as she used to be. I do get to put a flourish or two here and there like this table top in our camper. I leave my mark on just about everything. Just to get it back into waterfowl territory, this Old MKV was a call I got back some 48 years ago, I did a little relief carving on it, lost it about 5 years ago. William without my knowledge heard my story and secretly mailed me a replacement, I can't wait to try it out. I had that duck call since high school and was crushed when I lost it. William is the man.

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My wife keeps me in check, she's not nearly as impressed with my work as she used to be. I do get to put a flourish or two here and there like this table top in our camper. I leave my mark on just about everything. Just to get it back into waterfowl territory, this Old MKV was a call I got back some 48 years ago, I did a little relief carving on it, lost it about 5 years ago. William without my knowledge heard my story and secretly mailed me a replacement, I can't wait to try it out. I had that duck call since high school and was crushed when I lost it. William is the man.

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It was a very very small way to show my appreciation for all your patience with me as I start this decoy journey. Duck calls have been my collection since I was 16. When I heard the story, and heard it was one of the reasons (not the only reason) you hadnt hunted in so long, it was a small small way maybe light that fire up under you to get back out. It is really the least I could do for someone who has helped me so much.
 
ScottCK, I hear you on the foam dust. It clings to everything, gets everywhere and then it's getting it into the washing machine. It doesn't come off in the washing machine, it ends up in the lint screen of the dryer. On the rare occasion my wife slips her black and dark grey Scheels uniform into the washer not knowing what I've already put in, it's not a good time with pink dust all over her dark uniform. It always cleans off in the lint screen, thankfully. I really have to get in the mood to carve anything, wood, cork or foam. I dress up like someone on a hazmat crew. I'm allergic to wood dust and add that to asthma and I end up with a respirator on, not a dust mask, safety classes, face shield, one of my hooded fishing shirts and I can stay fairly clean. What a career choice I made, at least the foam dust doesn't cause me health issues like wood does, however I still carve wood on occasion, I love it. I haven't duck hunted in four years now, so my working decoy photos are older.

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Don..... I just realized the floor isnt even visible with all the foam shavings you got going on there..... What do you do with all that spare foam? I assume throw it but there has to be something that can be done with scrap foam. With urethane, I just throw it in the mold and then pour new foam around it. No one would ever know scrap foam is in some of my decoys when I am casting them. Obviously thats a little different when you are carving foam.
 
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