 Hover de Grasse is a town in the American state of Maryland. It sits close to where the Susquehanna River meets the Chesapeake Bay. Captain Bob Jobes goes fishing in these waters. Where's the crabs? Fresh out of the Chesapeake Bay today. This part of Maryland is famous for its wildlife. Hover de Grasse is also known for a different kind of bird. Captain Jobes is one of the top decoy carvers in Hover de Grasse. I was just growing up as a kid learning the skill how to do this. I got two brothers of carves, my son carves, my father. Three generations of carving decoys. Hunters use decoys to get ducks and geese to come close enough to shoot. The wooden birds are so highly respected here that Hover de Grasse calls itself the decoy capital of the world. It also has a museum with more than 1,000 decoys. Most were handmade in the Chesapeake Bay area. John Sullivan is director of the museum. Approximately 14,000 visitors come here each year. We have visitors from all over the United States and all over the world. Henry Miner came from the Chicago area to see the decoys. I particularly like the older ones, the very first style, and anything that's wood because nowadays everything's plastic or foam, so they're all pretty neat to look at. The demand for decoys rose in the middle of the 19th century because of a device called a sink box. Hunters would hide in the middle of these floating structures surrounded by decoys. You'd use from 200 to 500 decoys around these gunning devices and that demand put a lot of the house painters and carpenters in the business of producing decoys. The sink box was banned in 1935 and the demand for decoys dropped. The wooden birds became American folk art. People were collecting decoys and we were selling so many decoys. We could just solely make our living off of carving. It's changing a little bit now with the economy. Decoys are beloved in Maryland. They sit in restaurants, store windows, and in houses, including the home of Mitch Schenck. I made 1955 by my grandfather. Our Madison Mitchell, this is a special one, this is the year that I was born. Madison Mitchell was the most productive decoy maker in Hover to Gras. Schenck started collecting decoys as a young man when he worked for his grandfather. In Haveri Grace, if you drove around town and knocked on a door, most of the houses would probably have at least one decoy. There are many at Vincenty decoys. Jeanne Vincenty has operated the business for 17 years. Well, our customers are local people who are aware of the tradition. They're also tourists that come in and don't understand quite exactly what a decoy may be. But then when they come in, they find something in the store that they really like and consider a treasure. She says decoys can cost from 50 to several thousand dollars. This antique decoy is priced at almost five thousand dollars. Vincenty also sells wood carving supplies. There are younger people coming into it every day. Is it the number that we saw years ago? Probably not. Vincenty hopes more young people become decoy carvers so the tradition will continue in Hover to Gras. I'm Faith Lapidus.