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From block to bird: How one CT woodworker finds meditative joy in the art of bird carving

Bird carver Hank Sprouse carves under the beak of a piece of wood that is slowly becoming a cedar waxwing.
Tyler Russell
/
Connecticut Public
Bird carver Hank Sprouse shows off his work at his home workshop in Stamford on August 12, 2025.

Hunched over a piece of wood, Hank Sprouse whittles away in his basement workshop in Stratford, Connecticut. What looks like a simple carving now, will eventually become a realistic-looking cedar waxwing bird.

“The eye is going to be somewhere in here,” he says.

Sprouse is part of a dwindling community of bird carvers, a group of artists who make lifelike birds out of blocks of wood. It’s a meticulous process that includes photo research and reference materials, making sure all the features are anatomically correct, from the size of the bill to the design and color of each etched-in feather.

A former dentist, Sprouse jokes that the drilling comes easy to him. The hard part is making sure the glass eyes point in the same direction.

“I think my wife has corrected me on all but maybe four or five on the eyes,” Sprouse says. “She says, ‘No, up, down, in or out.’ She's got a hand in every carving I've ever done, I think. So that's fun for her and it's fun for us.”

Bird carvings, especially of waterfowl birds like ducks, were initially used by hunters to attract and capture real birds. A duck decoy, for instance, might have lured a real duck, thinking there was food nearby or that the area was safe to rest in. The earliest decoys were made from reeds by Native Americans, with colonial settlers turning to wood carvings in the 1700s.

Bird carver Hank Sprouse shows off his work at his home workshop in Stamford on August 12, 2025.
Tyler Russell
/
Connecticut Public
Sawdust floats through the air as Hank drills away layer after layer with slow, practiced motions.

But as the number of bird hunters has declined, so too has the need for decoys, freeing the carvings to be more elaborate and artistic than purely functional. Over time, bird decoys have come to be considered a form of American folk art – with decoys housed in art museums, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

“It's gotten so sophisticated and breathtaking,” says Sprouse, who’s been making decoys since the 1980s. He remembers when the world championship in waterfowl carving, an annual competition held in Ocean City, Maryland, was filled with carvers and spectators.

“Elbow to elbow, room to room. There was no extra space anywhere. And that's just kind of slowly declined,” he says.

That decline is due, in part, to a lack of new, younger people taking up the craft, he says. Many of today’s bird carvers are on the older side. Sprouse is 84 years old and says the majority of carvers he knows are over 60.

“I’m really sad to see it go in the direction it's going and I don't know what, if anything, will turn it around,” Sprouse says. “It is a true American craft and it's going to be a shame if that dies.”

Bird carver Hank Sprouse shows off his work at his home workshop in Stamford on August 12, 2025.
Tyler Russell
/
Connecticut Public
Hank points to each of the birds mounted on a seesaw, weighed against a vertical board listing the various threats to the continued survival of those species.

This year, Sprouse used his decoy-making skills for a new purpose: to raise awareness of birds facing habitat loss. According to a 2019 study by the National Audubon Society, two-thirds of North American bird species are at risk of extinction due to climate change, including extreme heat in the spring and rising sea levels.

Sprouse and another bird carver, Alan Gabris of New Hampshire, created an art installation of more than a dozen decoys, representing birds from the endangered spoon-billed sandpiper to the extinct Bachman’s warbler.

“We’ve got to make more people aware of what's going on,” Sprouse says. “And that's what we tried to do.”

For Hank, the attention to detail is a meditative process. A sign in his workshop reads ‘bird carving is good therapy.’

“We've all got a talent that's in us and a lot of people never find it,” Sprouse says. “I just was lucky. I saw it and I found it and I love doing it. I love what my gift is. So I continue to do it.”

Hank considers this female cardinal to be his best carving. Naturally, he gave it to his wife as a gift.
Tyler Russell
/
Connecticut Public
Hank considers this female cardinal to be his best carving. Naturally, he gave it to his wife as a gift.

Áine Pennello is a Report for America corps member who covers the environment and climate change for Connecticut Public.

Áine Pennello is Connecticut Public Radio’s environmental and climate change reporter. She is a member of Report for America, a national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to cover under-reported issues and communities.

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SOMOS CONNECTICUT es una iniciativa de Connecticut Public, la emisora local de NPR y PBS del estado, que busca elevar nuestras historias latinas y expandir programación que alza y informa nuestras comunidades latinas locales. Visita CTPublic.org/latino para más reportajes y recursos. Para noticias, suscríbase a nuestro boletín informativo en ctpublic.org/newsletters.

Federal funding is gone.

Congress has eliminated all funding for public media.

That means $2.1 million per year that Connecticut Public relied on to deliver you news, information, and entertainment programs you enjoyed is gone.

The future of public media is in your hands.

All donations are appreciated, but we ask in this moment you consider starting a monthly gift as a Sustainer to help replace what’s been lost.

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