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Bob & his carvings

Bob Spear was born in 1920 in Burlington, Vermont. In his youth his parents encouraged him to explore the world of nature around him. His early years were spent in Massachusetts where his family moved when his mother was unable to find a teaching job in Vermont. She found work in Wyben, teaching in a one-room school house, and Bob was her student for 6 years. Bob drew and painted as a youngster and even learned to do taxidermy by age 12.

After his mother’s untimely death when Bob was just 14, the family moved back to Vermont to the family farm in Colchester. Here he continued his self-education as a naturalist, specializing in birds. Here too, at age 18, Bob carved his first birds modeled after a stray parakeet that flew into their shed, and has now been carving birds for 66 years.

With his patient manner and keenly observant eye, Bob Spear has become one of the state’s most distinguished naturalists. After 10 years of farming, a tour in the U.S. Navy, and nearly 20 years as a technical specialist at General Electric in Burlington, Bob has devoted his life to conservation and education. He founded Vermont’s first chapter of the National Audubon Society in 1962 and was also instrumental in the acquisition and creation of the Green Mountain Audubon Nature Center, which he directed for seven years. He was recipient of the 1966 Wildlife Conservation Award, given by the National Wildlife Federation “for outstanding contributions to the wise use and management of the nation’s natural resources.”

Spear is author of Birds of Vermont and in 1979 he received the Science Educator’s Award “for outstanding contributions to science education in Vermont.” In 2003 he was named a Fellow of the Vermont Academy of Arts and Science, because of “outstanding contribution to the Arts, Humanities, Sciences, or Education.”

After retiring as director of the Green Mountain Audubon Center, Bob tried to find an organization to display his growing collection of life-size carvings of Vermont birds. Not finding anyone with the space needed to house this huge project, he converted the barn next to his house, and in 1987 opened the Birds of Vermont Museum to membership. The collection has grown to over 450 carvings of birds, with another 50 birds to be carved to complete the project. He plans to carve Vermont butterflies next, 100 of them, with their complete life cycles and favorite host plants.

Bob Spear is not just the Founding Director of the Birds of Vermont Museum and bird carver. At age 86 he still cuts, transports and stacks all the firewood used to heat his workshop. He maintains the butterfly gardens and the large and small ponds and the bird feeder area. He mows and maintains the trails on the 100 acres of property, which provide access to a rich variety of habitats and animal species.

Bob’s passion is to use biologically accurate wood carvings to teach both kids and adults about the importance of birds and their role in the earth’s ecosystem. The Birds of Vermont Museum is the only teaching facility in New England that uses woodcarvings as an educational tool.

Below are three published articles about the carver.
Each article when selected will open in a new window but will close when another selection is made.
"Carver of Vermont Birds"
Vermont Life, Spring 1981
"Nature, Close at Hand"
Vermont Life, Summer 1995
"Cranking out the carvings at Vermont Bird Museum"
Natural New England, Winter 2003
900 Sherman Hollow Road, Huntington, VT 05462 ~~(802) 434-2167 ~~Email