Sanford Gunning Box?

Good morning, Troy~
Another fine bit of work! Thanks very much for doing this.

A few thoughts - of course!

1) I, too, saw my roller covers in half on the bandsaw.

2) Good color on that Desert Mountains!

3) Before I went to conduit for the headpiece/bow, I laminated them from Red Oak ripped to a scant 1/8-inch. Back in the day, I used Weldwood - and lots of little clamps. The EMT is much quicker and stronger - and is easier to attach to the box. I flatten the ends in a bench vise - then bore a single hole for a roundhead s/s screw.

sm 17. Bow ends rounded on grinder then screwed through hull into gunwale..jpg

4) I thoroughly enjoyed your "sea trials". You had the same observations I have had. OK to use as a boat in very limited circumstances - but never to hunt or shoot from whilst afloat.

5) A bunch of us are flat-out this week prepping for Saturday's Long Island Decoy Collectors Annual Show. In doing so, I had the pleasure of reading a new (2025) book about gunning on Long Island. Bernie Schumejda did a fine job with: Of Days Gone By - The Historic Pursuit of Ducks, Geese and Shore Birds on Long Island. I have not yet met Bernie - nor have I studied every page. But, Bernie pointed me to several accounts that dealt with hunting Canada Geese - which is the theme of our main exhibit this year. What has caught my attention most, though, has been a term new to me: Sedge Box.

I have long known that the concept of gunning boxes (coffins) goes way back into the 19th century. The first one I saw in the "flesh" (actually after I had built my own) was at the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum in St. Michael's, MD.

https://cbmm.org/

All the "originals" I have seen were built square - like a low shoebox. I wish I could see the sedge boxes that Bernie mentions several times throughout his tales. Here is one excerpt - from Shinnecock Bay – December of 1876 - which also covers the wonderful topic of live decoys:


“We come upon a dry shoal, just a wash, fifty feet long by about fifteen in width, and in a moment our keel grates the sand. All hands now jump overboard, and the boxes of geese are carried ashore. The geese are taken out separately, and toggled to stakes that are driven in the sand where the water is an inch or two deep, the line of stakes forming semicircles whose outer edges are from twenty to thirty yards from where we shoot. We then deposit our “duds” in boxes that are six feet long by two and a half wide, sunk into the sand, so that they are invisible twenty yards distant; yet they not only form a perfect “blind” from which to shoot, but shelter us completely from the piercing nor’-westers.”

So, in addition to coffins, meadow boxes, gunning boxes - we now have Sedge Boxes to describe these special portable duck blinds.

[The Admiral Fussbudget - and botanist - in me must point out that most of our saltmarshes are covered not with sedges but with grasses - Salt Hay and Cordgrass. Nevertheless, some of these marsh islands are known as sedges - and others are known a hammocks or thatches.]

6) I hope you do get around to sewing the canvas for at least one of your boxes. I think of the canvas not as skirts but as decks. They do much of the same work as wooden decks - hiding the gunner, keeping weather out - but are flexible to permit easy ingress and egress. And - as any duckboat builder will tell you (and as I am sure you know) - the decks can be as much work as the hull!

All the best,

SJS
 
Back
Top