Old Herters

Tony hall

Member
Man, I haven’t posted in a while but I’m as giddy as a kid on Christmas morning! Just cruised Facebook and saw a few bags of decoys with herters on top. $30. Messages the guy , said he just posted and got 20-39 messages. Someone was gonna come tomorrow for $40, I said give me 20-30 minutes and I would be there. Got 3 dozen original condition herters, enough carrylite clips and some 100’ packs of carry lite line (with original package at $1.25 a pack ) for $40.

Also a print off of herters models dated 1967. Idk if that’s actually real.
Anyway, I’m happy as a clam. Although they’re almost to nice to hunt.
 

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Tony,
That is awesome. They are the older ones I believe because they don't have the exposed keel weight encapsulated in the foam. I could be wrong though. Do they self right?

RVZ
 
Rod, I honestly haven’t pulled them out of the truck yet. Ended up going back to work, working till 6 am ( work for the utility company) then came home, drove son to school and napped. Definitely checking to see today. We hunt big water and it could be a bunch of trouble fixing flipped birds the whole time.

-Tony
 
Rod, I honestly haven’t pulled them out of the truck yet. Ended up going back to work, working till 6 am ( work for the utility company) then came home, drove son to school and napped. Definitely checking to see today. We hunt big water and it could be a bunch of trouble fixing flipped birds the whole time.

-Tony

Sounds like a big problem....but I'm a giver so I'd give you your $40 investment back to get out of them, LOL.

I actually just got 4 brand new never his the water Herter's bluebills in deal. Really don't have a use for them and thought about listing them on here but shipping to the east coast probably isn't worth it.
 
Well Rod/Kevin they do self right. After catching up on sleep I went to try and catch some pike and small mouth and tossed one in a few times and they flipped over. They seem to mostly be the pinkish foam variety. Idk where that dates them, but I will say they’re in better shape than majority of my divers , sans some plastic ones that will go up for sale now. They don’t seem to like the cold🥶.

It rained here this morning so they all got good rinse and they’ll get out up in the attic later tonight till August/September.

-Tony
 
If you have the spare time do yourself a favor and restle coat them before next season.
Amen to that. Speaking from experience I bought two dozen model 72's back in the 80's. I'm not sure they were ever used but were rigged with 20 feet of line and strap anchors. They started to get beat up quickly. I sent them to Herters and had them burlapped. Still in fine shape today. Restle coating would be the ticket.

RVZ
 
If you have the spare time do yourself a favor and restle coat them before next season.
That might happen this season, but still have to finish a dozen or so super mag mallards that I’m making from a goose mold I got off eBay. Have 4 restle coated but stoped molding this past winter because I was having to use more foam because of temps.

Plus have to help hunting partner repaint his rig of Jack Ring decoys (7 dozen).

If these go on mainlines I will for sure restle cost them. The kids like helping with that. And being divers they can probably paint all the bodies without any help!
 
Tony~

Great find! That 1967 vintage sounds about right. In addition to the flat bottoms (no extruded keel), they probably have solid brass screw eyes and washers - and not brass-plated steel that came later.
Herter's Durlon foam decoys (the over-size Model 72s and the life-size 63s) were first sold around 1955. I still have some Broadbill (aka Bluebill) my Dad bought around then. And, I've been gathering up bunches of Model 63 puddlers in recent years for hunting on small waters locally.
2 Herters Model 72 excerpt cropped.jpg



3 A Herters - Model 72 Bluebill  excerpt cropped.jpg

I think I have 40 or so - some earlier, some later (extruded keels). I coated them with epoxy+fine sawdust them re-painted them all about 10 years ago. Still the "industry standard" of Broadbill stool in my opinion.

D8.jpg

BTW: I always secure the head positions - which I vary - with caulk before painting. It prevents the heads from loosening up and compressing then foam in use and it prevents the anchor line from wedging 'twixt head and body.

Here is my tutorial: https://stevenjaysanford.com/re-painting-broadbill-decoys/

Enjoy!

SJS
 
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