Nebraskaland

00-March2022 singles for web-smaller

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1455420

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March 2022 • Nebraskaland 49 for information on those old clubs." Farrar collected, built, and, of course, used decoys, so it's no surprise that he wrote several pieces on the history of decoys, including Herter's, Mason, paper, miniature, Nebraska-made and even live decoys. For all of these pieces, Farrar talked to people who were part of the history. Lots of them. He tracked down old men who were market hunters, duck club members and ranchers. He would sit in their kitchens, or in some cases, their rooms at the local nursing home, turn on his cassette recorder, and listen to the stories of their lives and those who came before them. Sometimes he would go back for more. Some believe that Farrar wrote some of these historical pieces because he felt that if he didn't do it, no one would. "He knew it was getting away," Van Winkle said. "Like we all know, we lament the things we didn't do and the people we didn't talk to and the records that we don't have. He did something about it." Colorful autumn leaves, fungi, moss and lichen adorn a fallen paper birch tree in this image Farrar captured in 2005 at the Nature Conservancy's Niobrara Valley Preserve. o be in a marsh. The rich, stagnant fragrance of marsh. The gray sky. Drizzle on the neck. Squads of snow geese and courtship flights of pintails. The scene cries out for description, yet defies it. A glimpse back to our origins, a closeness to life other than our own, as if we belonged somewhere, finally belong somewhere … ." – Jon Farrar, from "Sky Carp" "T

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