"NCBA MEMORIAL ENDOWMENT FUND"
ADMINISTERED BY:
North
Carolina Bowhunters Association

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IN MEMORY OF:
JOE DON SAWYER
1955 - 2007
Joe Don Sawyer: Photo taken on a Tundra Swan hunt in Tyrrell County (12/31/2006)
Joe Don Sawyer, 51, of
Scranton, NC, passed away on Sunday, September 16, 2007 at his
home.
Joe Don is a long time NCBA member and supporter of bowhunting in N.C. Many
of you may know him from swan hunts taken with him at his home or in nearby
Tyrrell and Hyde counties. He holds the current NCBA record for the
largest Tundra Swan in NCBA's "All-Time Records" at 147 4/8" from
Tyrrell County (2004).
Joe Don was a commercial fisherman, trapper and hunting guide by trade. He
was a very knowledgeable outdoorsman and hunter.
There was a funeral wake and viewing Tuesday, Sept. 18 from 6 - 8 p.m. at
Bryan's Funeral Home in Swan Quarter. The funeral was held on Wednesday,
Sept. 19 at 2 p.m. at Epworth United Methodist Church in
Scranton, NC.
Please keep Joe Don and his family in your thoughts and prayers in the
coming days and months ahead..
TESTIMONIALS & COMMENTS;
North
Carolina loses a sportsman...... “O Death, won’t you
spare me over to another year?” • RALPH STANLEY
By: Craig Holt (Editorial article from North Carolina
Sportsman Magazine; November 2007)
The first
time I met Joe Don Sawyer I didn’t see him. I only could hear his
laughing voice, stretching familiar words into odd-sounding shapes as he
spoke in his lilting Down East brogue to his best friend, Tonnie Davis
of
Roxboro. It was in pre-dawn January darkness four years
ago. We were in a field near
Scranton in Beaufort County . Joe Don and Tonnie were setting up
tundra-swan decoys, handing out white plastic coveralls to about a dozen
hunters and showing them how to hunker down in a black-earth ditch so
the swans wouldn’t see them after daylight. “You get in the ditch
next to Joe Don,” Tonnie said. “You’ll hear and see something amazing.”
About 30 minutes after daybreak, we heard the eerie “whoo-eee” calls of
the swans. They’d flown off the waters of Lake Mattamuskeet , the Pungo
River , and Pungo Lake where they’d spent the night and now were winging
toward local grain fields. “Joe Don’s the best I’ve ever seen at
calling swans,” Tonnie said. “And he uses his mouth, not a call. Not
only that, he wears glasses and can see a swan before I can with
binoculars.” “There’s some (swans),” Joe Don said, pointing at the
horizon. I saw nothing. “Whoo-eeep,” he called, his hand
cupped beside his mouth. Soon a flight of six swans, dots in the
air, turned and headed toward us. They’d been a mile away when Joe Don
called. That day each hunter bagged a swan, lured within shotgun
range by Joe Don Sawyer’s magical voice. “He was a natural man,”
Davis said. “He earned his living from nature.” Later the hunters
descended upon his late mother-in-law’s two-story frame house at
Scranton where Joe Don served as a gracious host and cook. Each
year, he left Friday evening and returned with a couple bushels of salty
Rose Bay oysters. He surprisingly served us corn on the cob he’d frozen
in the husks during summer. His wife, Phyllis, added wild pig and deer
roasts. Shrimp, seafood stew, flounder and other Down East fare filled
our bellies as well.
Last year during a deer hunt he was slung off a truck tailgate and
slammed into the asphalt. Seriously injured, he was flown by helicopter
to a hospital. Although Joe Don thought he was covered by his wife’s
insurance policy, he wasn’t. With his shoulder’s muscles and
tendons damaged, he refused an operation. “I’m getting better,” he said,
lifting his arm above his shoulder last January. A man who always
had a smile on his face, Joe Don was a salt-of-the-earth human being.
He’d give you the shirt off his back and his pants, too, if you’d asked.
Apparently, a lot of people asked for his help, considering the size of
the funeral procession that stretched September 19 from Bryan Funeral
Home in Swan Quarter to tiny Epworth United Methodist Church at
Sladesville. More than 150 friends who arrived 30 minutes
before the service couldn’t find seating inside the church to hear three
pastors preach his funeral. It’s a cliche, but men like Joe
Don Sawyer aren’t made today. His friends, family and
community will miss him sorely.
I first met Joe Don Sawyer on a swan hunt with him and Tonnie Davis in Tyrrell County. I think it was when I shot my first swan with a bow in 2002. Pink Atkins, Jay and Becky Campbell were also on the hunt. I do remember that all six of us shot our swans with a bow in a time period of about 1 1/2 hours. For some reason, we ended up at Joe Don's home in Scranton, NC the next day. All of us had taken swans with bow and arrow, including Joe Don. It was his first one with a bow also. He showed us around his home and property. He had a smokehouse where he prepared batches of venison jerky. He always carried a big pouch of his jerky on swan hunts and shared it with everyone up and down the ditch where we set up the swan decoys. He had a number of paper shell pecan trees in his yard also and the year I was there, the ground was covered with pecans. I scooped up a grocery bag full of them and feasted on pecans throughout the winter. I put a few dozen of these pecans in the freezer with plans to plant them later, hoping they would sprout. Later that year, I put one pecan in each of about 10 gallon cans of mulch and watered them frequently.. Then, I watched and waited. Six of these nuts did sprout, and before the next spring, I planted them in the pasture by my home. Five of them survived. They stand about 5 feet tall now. I may be around when these trees grow large enough to begin bearing fruit, and maybe not! But every time I see them, I think of that first of many meetings with Joe Don Sawyer, and I remember his friendly nature. Many say that he was the best at calling swans with nothing but his mouth and an inborn talent for communicating with nature. I sat beside him in a ditch blind on many occasions and took photos and videos of him calling swans. I took the photo at the top of this page in January, 2007 while on another swan hunt with him. As the 2007-08 swan season approaches, there will be something.. and someone missing from our annual swan hunts that cannot be replaced. This is how I'll remember Joe Don Sawyer... Submitted by: Ramon Bell (December 4, 2007)
PHOTO GALLERY:
Joe Don Sawyer w/ state record Tundra Swan w/ Bow, Score: 147 4/8"; Taken in
Tyrrell County (2004)