Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland March 2015

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/467533

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58 NEBRASKAland • JANUARY-FEBRUARY 2015 Send contributions to: Portraits from the Past, NEBRASKAland Magazine, P.O. Box 30370, Lincoln, NE 68503-0370. Or e-mail to Tim.Reigert@Nebraska.gov. Photos should show people enjoying Nebraska outdoor activities, such as camping, boating, hunting or fishing, and must have been taken before 1980. We will give priority to unusual photos or activities. When possible, please include a story about the photograph and identify the people, places and approximate date it was taken. Photos will be returned. Bounty from a short afternoon of fishing at Dead Timber Recreation Area near Scribner in June 1968. Pictured (L-R) with great- Uncle Gus Legband of rural Snyder are Roger, Fred, and Jim Spath (myself) of Webster. All of the bullheads were literally caught a few feet off of the bank. Uncle Gus was an avid fisherman who loved taking his grandchildren and grand- nephews to Dead Timber and was almost speechless that day that so many could be caught so close to the bank. He could only surmise that a school of fish was swimming by at the time. Adding to the feat was the fact Uncle Gus spent most of the afternoon untangling lines. – Jim Spath, North Platte, Nebraska ▲ The photo was taken in the fall of 1973 of Uncle Royceton Jones and his nephew, Steve McDonald, with a Vizsla named Lady. Taking a break from work and football, these two would sneak off to enjoy the camaraderie and beauty of the Nebraska countryside near Bennett. Uncle Royceton made sure his nephew Steve was educated in the rules and techniques of bird-hunting (and fishing in the summer months) – a love that Royceton passed on to his own sons, and nephew Steve passed on to his. – Donna J. McDonald, Lincoln, Nebraska ▲ This picture is of my brother, Leo Marek, who farmed four miles south of Exeter, now deceased. There were two small ponds in his pasture. You could sneak up the dam and pop over the edge. There were so many ducks on the pond they were shoulder to shoulder. The pond was completely covered with the ducks. Together we shot the ones he is holding in the picture. This was in 1958 about corn picking time. – Don Marek, West Des Moines, Iowa ▲ a n P U S a w f G w g n a t b b ▲

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