Exhibit explores duck hunting history on Lake Koshkonong
Photo
Photo
Photo
FORT ATKINSON Well before Lake Koshkonong became a haven for pontoon boats and other forms of personal watercraft, it was a lush wetland with vast beds of wild celery that attracted ducks from states and provinces hundreds of miles away.
That history will be front and center starting Sunday with the opening of “The Legacy of Duck Hunting on Lake Koshkonong” at The Hoard Historical Museum in Fort Atkinson.
“So many people don’t know the history of the lake; there are no signs of it anywhere,” said Dick Wanie, an outdoor enthusiast, newspaper columnist and retired teacher who came up with the idea for the 16-day show.
“The people who know the history of the lake are dying, and when they’re gone so is the an important part of the lake’s history.”
Now a 10,500-acre body of water, Lake Koshkonong was once a fertile wetland with the Rock River running through its center. With the 1851 construction of a dam at Indianford, the wetland became a shallow lake with thriving beds of wild celery.
Hundreds of thousands of waterfowl, including the coveted canvasback duck, zeroed in on the habitat on their spring and fall migrations.
For that reason, Koshkonong was known as one of the finest duck hunting lakes in the Midwest, Wanie said. Prosperous hunt clubs dotted the lake’s shores.
Market hunting—the killing of thousands upon thousands of canvasbacks—provided a living for many, and boxcars full of prized waterfowl were sent to the finest restaurants from Chicago to New York.
Six historic hunting boats, including two Koshkonong Monitors, a Whitney float and a Kidney strip skiff will be on display. Exhibits also feature historic hunting clubs, decoys, market hunting, duck stamps, motors, guns, mounted waterfowl and duck calls.
Wanie, who was raised on the famed Horicon Marsh, came up with the idea for the show about a year ago and assembled a dedicated committee to help make it happen.
Wanie, the son of a conservation warden, said duck hunting is his life. He believed he could pull his like-minded friends together and put on the show at the beautifully renovated Hoard museum.
“People visit this area and they wonder about Lake Koshkonong,” he said. “What is its heritage?
“It’s not a history of jet skies and motor boating.”
IF YOU GO
What: “The Legacy of Duck Hunting on Lake Koshkonong,” a show dedicated to hunters, historians, outdoor enthusiasts, collectors and the general public.
Where: The Hoard Historical Museum, 401 Whitewater Ave., Fort Atkinson.
When: Opens Sunday with a reception from 1 to 4 p.m. Exhibitors, carvers, hunters and collectors will be on hand. Bob Swann of Newville will demonstrate decoy carving, and Kurt Buggs of Janesville will identify decoys.
At 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 20, DNR area fish manager Don Bush will make a presentation on “Layout Gunning with the International Association of Scooter Shooters.”
Hours: Exhibit hours will be 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays with extended programming hours until 6:30 p.m. on Wednesdays. Wednesday programming will include painting of decoys, duck calls and other topics of interest.
Cost: Free
For more information: Visit www.hoardmuseum.org or call (920) 563-7769

Sep 12, 2008 at 8:18 a.m.
Suggest removal
Long_Time_Gone-
You completely missed the point of my comment.
People like you will find something wrong with everything. Enjoy yourself. Oh, and do my homework? Why don't you read your first comment again. With your definition of the rich and middle class being so accurate. Get out of the house a little.
Sep 11, 2008 at 10:04 p.m.
Suggest removal
Spark - If you want to have a museum exhibit extolling the "good ole days" when Koshkonong was a swamp, then at least tell the whole story.
*
The biggest abusers of the ecosystem were the huunting clubs who had the lake to themselves.
*
Most of those hunting clubs ran their effluent (toilet water) through pipes discharged directly back into the lake (swamp)
*
Grow-up and do your homework, museum boy.
Sep 11, 2008 at 9:45 a.m.
Suggest removal
I feel bad for everyone that has to post nothing but negative comments on this site. Your lives must be pretty boring. You can't even accept something nice like this exhibit that is taking place. Have to find the bad things about it and go off in a complete opposite direction. Oh and by the way, get your facts straight on the hunt clubs. You're making false accusations. Relics? Get a clue. Why don't you take a look at how many rich folks are bringing their boats up to tear around the lake on. No hunting rules in clubs? You are absolutely clueless. Oh ya, and owning a home and a boat on a lake is real middle class. Everyone can afford that.
Sep 10, 2008 at 4:15 p.m.
Suggest removal
It always cracks me up when stories like this are written in such a way that implies life was better before civilization encroached on habitat.
*
"Well before Lake Koshkonong became a haven for pontoon boats..." in other words, dams change life for the worse.
*
Those private hunting clubs should not be romanticized as something great left behind from bygone days. They are relics, and reminders how rich, affluent, capitalists traveling to our sleepy hamlet from big cities and raped the Koshkonong environment for their own profits.
*
Pontoon boats, homes, restaurants and marinas are much more "middle class" pursuits than implying the lake should return to a big shallow swamp - chasing boats, businesses and homeowners off the lake - so the Wall Street, LaSalle Street crowd can return for the enjoyment of the very few who can afford private clubs.
Sep 10, 2008 at 2:47 p.m.
Suggest removal
Hunting clubs are not exempt from any bag or season limits. Waterfowl season length and bag limits are determined and regulated on a FEDERAL level.
Sep 10, 2008 at 11:41 a.m.
Suggest removal
Sure, so the hunt club land is not able to be accessed by the public. If the water is high enough, they risk the public legally entering the marsh from the lake to fish and hunt. If they can close it off they have the land to themselves to hunt waterfowl without season limits due to the hunt club status. If they are so worried about the entire lake's waterfowl population and habitat, why not devote the vast resources they have to creating other areas of waterfowl habitat along the lakeshore? That would not directly benefit them, but additional areas like that would provide habitat for waterfowl, fish, and act as a filter for run-off pollution as well as a wave deadener reducing erosion.
Sep 10, 2008 at 9:17 a.m.
Suggest removal
I am sure some special interest groups would like to see the lake lowered more.
Before you post a comment, consider this:
Note: GazetteXtra.com does not condone or review every comment. Read more in our User Policy AgreementPost Comment
Commenting requires registration.