Reccomended reading?

Rutgers

Well-known member
One of the things on the agenda for the Rutgers Institute is to build a collection of books to have available for students to read. I'd like to devise a system to be able to lend them out without having to worry too much about them not coming back. I'm planning on taking some of the money raised from the kit sales and buying a few books to add to the library. I'm looking mainly to cover boats, decoys, and old hunting stories.

What are some recommendations for must haves?
 
Gordon MacQuarrie, Jimmy Robinson, Hochbaum

Waterfowl Tomorrow (copyright late 1960s)

Michigan Waterfowl Management (copyright 1930s)
 
Nick, thanks for the reply. I will check out those titles. Michele actually got me Michigan Waterfowl Management for Christmas last year. It is interesting to read some of the issues that were being debated then!
 
Paul,

Waterfowling These Past 50 Years by David Haugerbaumer and Big December Canvasbacks by Worth Mathewson are both must reads IMO. Worth has them at http://www.sinkbox.com/ The art work in both books was done by David and both are about exactly what you described..... Decoys, boats and old huntin' stories!
 
Paul-

Lamar Underwood has several books out that are a collection of stories from many different authors. I've got a couple of the books and I thoroughly enjoy reading them. One other book I've enjoyed is called A Hunter's Heart: Honest Essays on Blood Sport by David Petersen and it's a collection of essays on hunting and the traditions behind hunting. Perhaps not what you are looking for, but an interesting read none the less.

Some of these books you can find second or third editions that aren't "worth" anything so if someone was rude enough to walk off with the book and not return it, it's not a huge loss.

I've really enjoyed reading Haugerbaumer, Heilner, and I've learned from Strung (I think Norman Strung), Bellrose, Albert Hachbaum and Greyson Chesser. Duck Decoys and how to rig them by Ralph Coykendall is a good one too, I found it especially helpful as a person just getting into the addiction of waterfowling.

Hope this helps a bit

Dani
 
Paul,

How's it going? Great down here. Hope you don't mind a long and rambling list...most of these are out of print, but Alibris on the internet is a good source. It's blowing NNW 35 gusting to 45, which is likely destroying several blinds we just stuck...great evening to ponder some wonderful literature! Some of my favorites:

1. Roland Clark: Gunners Dawn; Pot Luck; and Stray Shots are all excellent
2. Anything by Nash Buckingham, especially Tattered Coat; Ole Miss; Bloodlines; and De Shootinest Genteman (best off type collection)
3. Gordon MacQuarrie trilogy: Stories of the Old Duck Hunters etc....
4. Van Campen Heilner: A Book on Duck Shooting
5. Eugene Connett (editor) Duck Shooting Along the Atlantic Tidewater (has section on Eastern Shore brant...you've "been there, done that"!)
6. any Henry A. Fleckenstein decoy book: Southern Decoys of Virginia and the Carolinas; Shorebird Decoys; & Decoys of the Mid-Atlantic...will give you a woody if you like traditional decoys and techniques (at least it did me!)
7. Bruce Wright, High Tide and an East Wind (black duck; biology heavy)
8. Albert Hochbaum, Canvasback on a Prairie Marsh (cans; biology heavy)
9. Robert Roark: The Old Man and the Boy
10. Fred Bodsworth: Last of the Curlews (if you like the natural history of shorebirds that were gunned, this will give you goosebumps!)
11. Steve Ward (one of the famous Ward Bros. decoy makers):Closed for Business (poetry collection by a legendary decoy maker and Bayman)

There's a start...I'll check out the bookcase in the morning. Apparently I woke the baby, so my wife is rocking him in that room at the moment. I'd better not press my luck and turn the light on. He's 16 months old and hopefully one day he'll ask to read these titles...if I do my job correctly, he will! My 6 year old daughter already does most of her homework sitting on my "shaving horse" with cedar shavings all around her. That's a good start, I guess.

Once again, great topic...PG
 
Upon Nash Buckingham being mentioned I have to ask. Is it true he was an elitist that subscribed to the belief hunting was to be enjoyed by the privaleged, similar to English fox hunting. It's widely accepted he was a great outdoor writer, but I've also heard his attitudes were those of one belonging to a better class desiring to be served by the lesser. Anyone have that impression?
 
Eric,

I'd say you might get that impression. Buckingham came from such a background, many of his stories are centered around large duck clubs with wealthy and powerful members. However, his anecdotes about his forays with the guides and locals he got to know over the years, suggest to me that he appreciated and respected a true sportsman and outdoorsman regardless of their background. I've never read anyone else's opinion such as a biography or anything, so I might have the wrong impression. Also, even though most of his stuff was published as an adult in the early 1900's, most of the stories are set in either his youth or young adulthood in the latter half of the 1800's.

It's hard for me to relate to the politics and ethics of that time in today's context. I guess I like the writing because it's pretty obvious he lived that life and the core of the stories often hit the mark--many are about personal relationships set in the context of gunning. Plus the writing and wit are awesome. I think Buckingham was a very active conservationist at a time when those concepts were not nearly a prevalent as today. Probably can google him for more info.

On the same topic, I believe tha Van Campen Heilner was a wealthy brat, who was likely a drunk, and traveled the world on his family's money shooting waterfowl. I still love to read his stories like taking an oxcart to a field to shoot geese in Hungary with the locals feeling he was simply a lunatic. I guess I'm cursed that way.

PG
 
Upon Nash Buckingham being mentioned I have to ask. Is it true he was an elitist that subscribed to the belief hunting was to be enjoyed by the privaleged...


Have you seen any deer hunting shows lately? hehe Seems that is the thought of some current outdoor personalities.

Tim
 
PG, thanks for the thoughtful insights.

Tim, I just about never watch deer hunting shows. In fact I can't remember the last time I watched a hunting show period. I guess the duck hunting ones are on when I'm not around otherwise I'd watch.
 
and first read Buckingham I liked his stuff. But the older I got, and get, the less I like him...

IMO he was an elitist, racist, arrogant, pampered, egotistical, GAME SHOOTER, who was also a "passable" writer. I said that once in a group of people, (you were there Eric), and was chastised by one of the people at the table who reminded me that I had to consider that when he wrote his stories that was "the way it was", at least as regards his attitudes towards "the help"....

I agreed with that then, and still do, but that doesn't change the fact that I can't recall anything that I've ever read of his where he wasn't "taken", "shown", "paddled" and "pampered", by those that he might have indicated he was "fond of", or, "found humerous", and was required only to "shoot when dem ducks gets here"...

He was driven to the RR station where he traveled in luxury to the hunting area, where he was picked up by "the help" who carried his baggage to his carefully appointed sleeping area....his drinks we're poured for him and his plates were filled and cleared by other "help", while yet more "help, scouted, prepared blinds, and then shuffled off to their less well appointed sleeping areas anxious, if you care to believe his story, to get up a couple of hours earlier than he did so that they could make his breakfast, pack his lunch, polish his apples, wax his shells, dry off his boat seat and then paddle his arrogant ass to the blind and back; whereafter they were expected to clean his ducks, and pour his drinks yet again....and he made sure that he pointed that out, usually more than once, in every story of his that I've ever read of his...

Thats privledge, and it might have been "the way it was done back then", but it isn't "hunting" as we think of it now and referring to him as a "Waterfowl Hunter" I think overstates what he was. No question he could kill ducks, but so can the guys that go to Argentina and pop a case of shells in the morning at ducks that someone else has scouted, baited up paddled them to, picked up for them, and then cleaned their guns, and given away their ducks for them when it was time for the first toddy of the afternoon.....might be grand but it isn't hunting and requires only money to accomplish...(for those that have been, or got to, Argentina that is not meant to be a condemnation of those trips just a statement of fact as I see it)...

For sure a good many of the writers of that time found themselves in that same lofty place, (after all given the time those that hunted for pleasure, and then wrote about it, were the rich, while those that hunted for food weren't interested in how "long" their guns could shoot, shells being expensive and far better spent on a water shot into a flock of birds), so his books do provide us with an "historical" look into the time but there are, IMO, certainly books that I believe do a "better" job of that.....

Someone mentioned Van Campen Heilner and thats a good example. He was indeed one of the rich and priveledged. Never far from his incredibly rich parents "tit", never went to even High School, never did an honest days work in his life, yet I find his writing far more compelling because he never emphasises his place in life, (in fact if you didn't read about him elsewhere you'd never know he was one of the filthy rich of his time from his duck hunting book--and how sad that there was only the one)....he never talks down about the help, never denegrates them by emulating their speech, never presents himself as being "waited on", "catered to", or "pampered" like Buckingham did so I enjoy reading him far more than I do the stuff written by "Mr. Nash"....

One persons opinion for sure and I'm equally sure that many will disagree. No argument that the guy was a good shot, (just ask him he'll tell you-repeatedly-in his stories), and no question that he killed a great number of ducks in his time but that doesn't, at least to me, make me want to include him in the "old days" hunters that are held up as "examples"....

I'll take Heilner, Connent, Holland, Claflin, Grinnell,over Buckingham if I want to read about the way it was back in the "good old days" because those guys give me the impression in their writing that they were actually "hunters" and not just "priveledged shooters)....

Steve
 
Eugene Connetts decoy book. My favorite for working decoys.

Nobody mentioned Gene Hill? Nobody's library is complete without a copy of Shotgunners Notebook.
Really if you havent read any Gene Hill your missing something special.

Rutgers,
I think I have some less than pristine copies of decoy, hunting and shooting books around.
I will get you some names and titles and if you want them there yours.
 
Paul,

Here's a good list.


Big December Canvasbacks by Worth Mathewson, 2000, ISBN 1568331533, 176 pp, Publisher: Derrydale Press
Chesapeake by James A. Michener, 1978, ISBN 0394500792, 865 pp, Publisher: The Random House Publishing Group
Gunning The Chesapeake: Duck And Goose Shooting On The Eastern Shore by Roy E. Walsh, Published 1980
Best Guns by Michael McIntosh, 1999, ISBN 0924357797, 400 pp, Publisher: Down East Books
The Duck-Huntingest Gentlemen, A Collection Of Waterfowling Stories by Keith C. Russell and friends, ISBN 0876913281, 287 pp
Duck Shooting Along The Atlantic Tidewater by Eugene V. Connett, 1947, 308 pp, Published in New York
Waterfowling These Past 50 Years: Especially Brant by David Hagerbaumer
A Sportsman's Scrapbook by John C. Phillips, 1928, 198 pp, Published in Boston
The Outlaw Gunner by Harry M. Walsh, 1989, ISBN 0870331620, 190 pp, Publisher: Tidewater
The Last Of The Market Hunters by Dale Hamm & David Blake, 1996, ISBN 0809320762, 118 pp, Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press
A Book On Duck Shooting by Van Campen Heilner
Successful Waterfowling by Zack Taylor
American Duck Shooting by Grinnel
American Duck, Goose & Brant Shooting by Bruette
American Waterfowl by Clafin
American Wildfowl Shooting by Long
The Bedside Wildfowler by Willock
Wings Over The Marshes by Ross
Our Feathered Game by Huntington
Guns and Gunning by Curtis
Duck Boats; Blinds; Decoys by Camp
Gunning For Upland Game & Wildfowl by Woods
The New Wildfowler by Gresham
The Complete Duck Shooter’s Handbook by Scharff
Decoying Waterfowl by Becker
Black Brant by Einarsen
Misty Mornings & Moonless Nights by Strung
Modern Waterfowling by Cartier
Hunting Ducks & Geese by Smith
The Duck Hunter’s Bible by Bauer
Hunting Ducks & Geese by Janes
Wildfowling In The Mississippi Flyway by Connett
Gunner’s Dawn by Clark
Shotgunning In The Lowlands by Holland
Gunning The Chesapeake by Walsh
Colonel Hawkes Shooting Diaries by Parker
Waterfowl Gunner’s Book by Williamson
The Duck Hunter’s Book by Underwood
The Bottoms by Hagerbaumer – Schuh
Ole Miss by Buckingham
For Who The Ducks Toll by Russell
Woodland, Field and Waterfowl Hunting by Robinson
Duck Guns, Shooting & Decoying by Salisbury
All About Wildfowling In America by Knap
The North American Waterfowler by Bernsen
The Art Of Hunting by Strung
The Boy Duck Hunter by Kellogg
Duck Hunting On The Fox by Miller D
Duck Decoys & How To Rig Them by Coykendall
Stray Shots & Pot Luck by Clark
Gunnerman by Bigelow
Waterfowling, The Upper Chesapeakes Legacy by Sullivan
Goose Hunting by Cadieux
A Saga Of Duck & Goose Hunting by Bush
The Experts Book Of Upland Bird & Waterfowl Hunting by Petzal
Shotgunning In The Lowlands By Ray P. Holland
Timber & Tide by Elman
The Stories of Old Duck Hunters & Other Drivel by Mac Quarrie-Taylor
Wildfowl Decoys of the Pacific Coast by Michael R. Miller and Fredrick W. Hanson

Chris
 
Thanks for the all the replies. Its obvious that many of you have taken a lot of time to post some good stuff. I really appreciate it. I've obviously got my work cut out for me. I'm going to start compiling and prioritizing a shopping list. Its amazing at how many of these books can be had for some pretty reasonable prices on some of the used book sites.

Geoff, I appreciate the offer. Let me know what you need to have. I have Gene Hill's book Mostly Tailfeathers, and have been picking through it for a while. Great stories and I like the style he writes in. I also like that they are pretty quick reads.

PG, Eric, and Steve, The Buckingham stuff is intriguing. The transition of hunting from the privileged to every man is an interesting subject to me, but I have never read his stuff. I may just have to.

Keep them coming! I will compile a list of what I have and post it tonight.
 
gave me several "waterfowl" related books....I've given some of those away and a couple that I didn't have ended up in my collection..the rest are in a closet and over the years, from time to time, I've thought that a good place for them to end up would be as "auction" items for the site....

I think now that a better place would be in a "lending library" where, over time, more than one person will be able to enjoy them. None of them are First/First and as memory serves they aren't in the greatest of condition so there is really little monetary or collectors value involved....

I'll dig them out and what I'd like to do is send them to Brain Ballard....once he gets them he can do "In Memory of Gary Potter", and "Property of.." simple line drawing on the face plate, (I haven't talked to Brian but can't imagine him not thinking this being a neat idea), and then get them to you when he's done with that.....Most people who read them in the future won't have a clue as to "who" Gary Potter is but seeing it will, at least, make them wonder.....

As to the "loaning" part of the Library NEVER, EVER, NEVER, allow a book of collectors value to leave your premises unless you have replacement value of that book in your hands....I've loaned out a bunch of books over the years and "most" I've gotten back....all but one of the few that I didn't weren't a great loss but the one that I remember, and that cautions me to caution you, that was was a "pristine" copy of Hagerbaumer's "THE BOTTOMS". I have no doubt that the person that still has that book has no idea who it beleongs to because although its signed and there is a sentiment included it doesn't reference my name specifically. The book was making a "several stop" loop, some of those "jumps" being impromptu and I simply lost track of it....nothing "intended" or "malicious" but the book was never returned and the replacement for it, which isn't signed, which doesn't have the personalized line drawing by the author, cost me $400.00...

So when you get to the lending stage, IF you have something that has value to it do it "one out,same back" and make sure that you are sure that if its lost, that if its damaged, that the person that had/has it will stand up for the replacement cost.....

Lessons learned....

Looks like a long, stormy weekend here. If thats the case I'll dig out the books on Sunday afternoon and let you know what the titles are....

Steve
 
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Steve,

That is a great idea!! Beyond genius!!

Let me know if a donation is needed to get the face plate work done. I like this idea alot.

-Jack
 
Thank You Steve, I really appreciate it. If you would like to write something up about Gary, and include a picture, I will frame it and put it in the Library.

I also appreciate the caution on lending stuff out. To date, I have lost several books due to lending them out. The short list as I can recall right now:

Signed copy of Making Decoys the Century Old Way. Fortunately a friend gave me another copy and I was able to get it signed.

Poetry of Steve Ward

The yellow Lem Ward Book

Mark Costilow's Pattern book

A handful of less important DU books and the like.

I will not be loaning out any of my signed copies, or gift copies of books. I am looking to have additional copies of these titles available to loan. One of the dilemas is that you never know who the 5% are that are going to screw you. I want to make information as accessible as possible to anyone who wants access to it. I have thought about putting a "price" on each book, and to check it out, a person will have to leave a check as a deposit in that amount. I will hold the check and return it when the book is returned. I will also be only letting out one book at a time. I would also eventually like to set this up to be able to do it by mail via this site and a few others, but with many books, to ship it twice, a guy could buy it for less. Ideas anyone?
 
lost a book, of value or not, to anyone that I loaned it to out of an intention to rip me off....rather I think what happened was that lack of good record keeping, (like not writing it down anywhere), agreeing to letting the book go to "someone else" before it came home, and just plain forgetting, by both parties, was the result of the loss....

Beyond the "that was so good I'd like to have a copy of it forever" trade copies should be of no value and you won't lose those IF you make sure that the loans are TRACKABLE....and if anyone ever does say "WOW--I gotta have this"....then all that would need to be done is for them to send you a check for the current replacement cost of the next trade copy that you locate Amazon, et. al.

Jack, I'm sure I can get Paul a copy of M.D. Johnson's waterfowl related books for cost....if you'll cover cost and shipping to Paul I'll contact M.D. and set it up so that you can send the check directly to M.D.....

Steve
 
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