Bob was generous enough to send me 2 Rock Crow Decoys that he donated to my crow museum. I am sure it will take time for me to get a good collection going but not a better way to start off.
Glad to be a part of you're crow museum in Minnesota. You will find other crow decoys but that one still in it's original wrap is quite rare. I still use those old Rock Crow decoys to hunt with to this day.
Bob A.
__________________
To listen to this radio talk show go to episode 12, Bob Aronsohn
Those decoys belonged to Boyd Robeson who was my partner for a little over 20 years.
I have to tell you something, think of the odds here, you are from Woodbury, MN and Boyd was from Woodbury County, Iowa!
I remember it like yesterday when I first ran into Boyd on the north side of Red Lake, South Dakota in 1965. Then I ran into him again in 1973 in Kansas with my brother. Boyd & I shot just shy ( 99,000 plus ) of 100,000 crows together from 1974 to 1994. That is not encluding the ones I shot with Jim Lundquist during those years. The greater majority were all killed in Kansas, some in Ft. Cobb as well. Ft. Cobb was done by the late 1970's to early 1980's.
Well thats the history lesson for today.
Bob A.
__________________
To listen to this radio talk show go to episode 12, Bob Aronsohn