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Making Tamarack Birds

An excerpt from Canadian Living HOME & GARDEN

TAMARACK DECOY

BY: ANNA HOBBS http://www.canadianliving.com/home-and-garden/article/tamarack-decoy 

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The year was 1965, and John Blueboy, a 35-year-old Cree Indian, was recovering from tuberculosis in the Moose Factory General Hospital. To fill in time during his year-long convalescence, he came up with the idea of making souvenirs, which he sold to the nurses. In so doing, he turned an ancient Cree goose-hunting lure into an elegant and graceful art form that has become a major source of income for the James Bay region Indians and brought them international recognition as artisans and sculptors. More importantly, it served to preserve the Cree heritage and bears witness to the ingenuity of John Blueboy's ancestors.

Tamarack goose decoys are delicate wood sculptures of various sizes made, not by carving, but by binding the fragrant twigs of the tamarack tree into a likeness of the Canada goose.

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Moose Factory and the neighboring community of Moosonee have become the principal production centres for these bird sculptures. The communities, located at the mouth of the Moose River, are the gateway to the Arctic via the enormous inland seas of Hudson Bay and James Bay. When the Polar Bear Express, a summer excursion train, rolls to a stop at the Moosonee railway station, it has literally reached the end of the line.

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Visitors to the area will discover a region with few developments, fewer people and an unyielding landscape.

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Here, where nature can be so unpredictable, there is at least one constant “ every year, the Canada geese return to signal the end of the long winter and the beginning of the spring hunt.

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For centuries, the Cree had fished, trapped and hunted, making use of ingenious ruses such as the coarse willow-twig decoys. Hunters made these lures for the spring hunt by forming a ball of twigs into a body core then covering them with an outer layer of longer twigs in the shape of a goose, with a large open "eye" in the head. When seen against the snow, the eye mimicked the white cheek patch of the Canada goose. For the fall hunt, mud and wooden decoys were the custom. But when plastic decoys that could be purchased easily and inexpensively became available, the handmade varieties fell out of favor and yet another link with the Cree past was threatened with extinction.

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Enter John Blueboy with his ingenious idea of making miniature decorative birds into souvenirs. He began using the rough drab willow twigs of the hunting decoys, but quickly realized the golden aromatic tamarack twigs produced an infinitely more appealing product.

When the Polar Bear Express rolled into Moosonee in the summer of '65, tourists were intrigued to find a young Cree sitting by his tent at the side of the road binding tiny twigs into graceful geese. That same year the manager of the local Hudson's Bay store placed a large order for decoys to sell as souvenirs. Two years later at the request of the Ontario government, John demonstrated his craft at Expo 67.

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Eventually, he would teach his eight sons his craft and today, three generations of John Blueboy's family, including brothers George and Ronald, their sons and daughters and two grandsons produce decorative decoys, each in a distinctive style. John makes broad-backed birds with slender necks and blunt tails. George's, by comparison, are delicate and sensuous and Ronnie tends to make stark, stylized square-chested birds.

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Traditionally, hunting decoys were made only by men. So it was natural that John Blueboy first shared his idea with his male friends and relatives. Ronnie's initial amused reaction to his daughters' desire to learn the craft was quickly replaced by stern teaching when he realized how keen they were to learn.

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(we don't get the big deal about girls making tamarack geese - we weren't raised that way and neither was our mom - must be mentioned because it was a different time or maybe a concern of the writer - more likely the writer probably didn't know that these were generally made on site where it generally would just be men around not that there was some 'rule' about girls not doing this)
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