Alaskan winter

Ronald Bock

New member
Took a long break from the duckboat page. Been carving alot each winter. A couple years ago I started collaborative work with my daughter. I carve and she paints. Her paint jobs are incredible.
This winter she just finished a harlequin. I am rounding out a bunch of goldeneyes for her next painting project. After that will be some wigeon.
It's fun working with my daughter.
 

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Welcome back! Your daughter definitely has done a great job with her paint job
 
She's a great artist, my son painted decoys for me for several years. I miss having him in the shop everyday. That blue wing is a stunner, what a talent your daughter is.
 
Snowing hard outside. Finished the day by priming 2 common and one Barrows goldeneyes.
Im also refinishing my daughter's 50 year old model 1200. The stock was in need of a new finish. It's on it's 6th coat of oil. Turning out great. Should be good for another 50.
 

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What kind of oil are you using on the shotgun stock. I use Birchwood Casey Tru Oil on my landing nets. I usually put on 8 coats and an additional coat each year to cover dings. My son was a fly fishing guide for 4 years and had the boat nets out nearly every day for 5 months a season, never an issue.
 
What kind of oil are you using on the shotgun stock. I use Birchwood Casey Tru Oil on my landing nets. I usually put on 8 coats and an additional coat each year to cover dings. My son was a fly fishing guide for 4 years and had the boat nets out nearly every day for 5 months a season, never an issue.
I used Watco Danish oil in dark walnut. After the first three coats I began vigorously buffing the oiled finish (just like polishing shoes in basic training). At the end of 8 coats it turned out beautiful. That oil will last much longer than varnish.
 
Took a long break from the duckboat page. Been carving alot each winter. A couple years ago I started collaborative work with my daughter. I carve and she paints. Her paint jobs are incredible.
This winter she just finished a harlequin. I am rounding out a bunch of goldeneyes for her next painting project. After that will be some wigeon.
It's fun working with my daughter.
Ron, where are you located in Alaska? Have a buddy in Eagle River. He now winters in south carolina. Never hunted there, but fished there...
 
my dad used danish oil almost exclusively on the wood work he made. I had a friend in kansas that always used tru oil, so that's what I used on this landing net. The wood came from the family farm, my dad traded a few black walnut trees to a mobile saw mill that used a vacuum kiln on his wood. The raw lumber stayed in the basement of the house for a decade, then my brother and dad took it to the university wood shop where my dad was the head of the industrial education department and proceeded to joint and plane all of it. When my dad passed in 2017 I brought a few boards back to Idaho and made several landing nets, a couple of drift boat nets and several wade nets. I took several boards that had white wood in them and it made a nice contrast in the bent wood laminations. It was a fun project.
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Sealed and Gessoed the common goldeneyes (2) and sent them to my daughter for painting. Got the Barrows all sealed. I'll send him home with her this weekend. She's gonna be busy painting.
Starting to sand on a bufflehead as well. It's a diver kind of winter.
 

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