This Bar-tailed Godwit Decoy Delivers Folk Art with a Contemporary Feel

Wooden decoys long played a key role in hunting birds. Artist David Personius hopes his modern take can inspire conservation instead.
A wooden Godwit decoy stands on the banks of a body of water with golden light cascading across a row of pine trees in the background.
Bar-tailed Godwit decorative decoy by David Personius. Photo: JR Ancheta

By the time artist David Personius was growing up in the 1950s, carved wooden bird decoys were largely a thing of the past鈥攃ollector鈥檚 items for folk art aficionados like his dad. European settlers, inspired by Native Americans creating avian replicas out of natural materials to attract live birds, picked up the practice of carving fake fowl. Those decoys became a vital tool for commercial hunting in the 1800s, a trade that slashed migratory bird populations and helped drive the Passenger Pigeon to extinction before the practice was banned. Eventually, the invention of plastic decoys for sport hunting in the 20th century made the handmade versions obsolete. But folk artists like Personius have kept the tradition alive.

Personius carved his first few decoys for personal use when he went duck hunting with his dad. He turned the hobby into a career after graduating from college in the 1980s, and spent a decade selling meticulously crafted shorebirds at art fairs and waterfowl shows across the country. 鈥淚 feel fortunate that I was at it long enough and had enough experience and talent to create my own little style,鈥 he says. Unfortunately, it was also a hard way to pay the bills鈥攕o Personius set his carving tools aside to work in publishing, then in horticulture. He finally returned to the craft 14 years ago, now living in Fairbanks, Alaska.

Every decoy starts as a hunk of wood鈥攐ccasionally more than one, as with this Bar-tailed Godwit, a long-legged wader with ruddy-chested breeding plumage. First Personius sketches the outline of the bird to use as a pattern and traces that onto the wood. Using a band saw, he cuts away the excess chunks and then carves the detailed shape with a utility knife. Finally, he smooths out the surfaces with rasps and sandpaper before joining the pieces together; a screw lends the godwit鈥檚 fragile neck some extra strength.

鈥淚 just come up with an illusion鈥攎y impression of what that bird might look like if you鈥檙e looking at it through binoculars.鈥

Then Personius heads to the kitchen鈥攈is ad hoc painting studio鈥攆or the final touches. Although he studied woodwork, sculpture, and ceramics, everything he鈥檚 learned about paint and color has been self-taught, and he鈥檚 developed his own method over the years. He begins by laying down texture with gesso, which painters often use to prime their canvases. Then he layers color on top with acrylics, stippling the paint to create the appearance of plumage. 鈥淚鈥檓 not trying to paint feathers,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 just come up with an illusion鈥攎y impression of what that bird might look like if you鈥檙e looking at it through binoculars.鈥 Finally, Personius adds glass eyes, along with a bill and legs made of custom-wrought iron from a local blacksmith. For the Bar-tailed Godwit, Personius also added wing tips that he cut and hammered out of copper aged in ammonia.

Most of the decoys Personius carves are shorebirds that rely on the Arctic habitat for their breeding grounds. That includes Bar-tailed Godwits: After nesting on the Alaskan tundra, the birds gorge themselves on crustaceans and clams around Bristol Bay. 鈥淭hey get absolutely, grotesquely huge,鈥 Personius says. 鈥淭heir internal organs shrink, their body swells with fat, they can barely get off the ground.鈥 Even more remarkable is what happens next.

When scientists began putting satellite trackers on Bar-tailed Godwits two decades ago, they discovered these birds travel from Alaska to New Zealand in one non-stop flight鈥攁 distance of more than 6,000 miles. 鈥淲hen they come down in New Zealand, they鈥檙e just a skeleton,鈥 Personius says. Come spring, they fly to China鈥檚 Yellow Sea to fatten up again before beginning the long journey back to Alaska.

Bar-tailed Godwits are not globally threatened today. But as with all migratory birds, they鈥檙e vulnerable to disturbances on their breeding and overwintering grounds鈥攁nd everywhere in between. Although decoys were originally created to kill birds, Personius hopes his modern versions can inspire action to protect them: 鈥淚鈥檝e been carving and talking about the feats of the Bar-tailed Godwit as a way to make people more aware of the plight of migratory birds,鈥 Personius says.

This piece originally ran in the Winter 2024 issue. To receive our print magazine, become a member by .