Nebraskaland

November 2025 Nebraskaland

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: https://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1541806

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November 2025 • Nebraskaland 37 "Johnsgard pointed out my errors on the bird and said another one should have won instead of mine." While he laughs at the memory, it also set Don on a path of gathering as much information as he could to become as detailed as possible. He has continued to receive critiques of his work, even if he never leaves the house. "I'm red-green colorblind," Don said. "But my wife was an art teacher, and my daughter is an art teacher. 'You're not supposed to have green here,' is something they would say to me, commenting about a particular bird I'm carving. Plus, there are so many other resources." He uses books, magazines and Tom Christie's YouTube videos for tasks like determining feather size, shape and position and paint color mixing. "You have to totally understand the anatomy of the bird you're doing," he said, a constant reminder for a veteran or novice carver. N A Brief Club History "The painting is my satisfaction," said Ed Svoboda, carver of this ruddy duck. "The goal is to get your work competing with folks around the world." Don Gabelhouse, a former fi sheries administrator with Game and Parks and a 55-year carver, continues to improve in his carvings, including this drake green-winged teal. His most important carving tool is a pair of lighted magnifying glasses. In the late 1960s, a group of folk art enthusiasts, wildfowl hunters, artists — both amateur and professional — biologists and game managers came together to form a group interested in collecting duck and goose decoys as well as carving working decoys. The champion of the group was Lincoln accountant Robert Wohlers, who hosted the fi rst meeting of the club in January 1970. Through the years, club members have competed on a regional and national level and continued to critique each other's work with the goal of keeping this long-standing artistic tradition alive. Now, 55 years later, the club welcomes those with national competition aspirations, as well as others who just want to see what decoy carving is all about. For more information on the club, including meeting times, email Norm Wise at wcwau1945@gmail.com.

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