Timt
AH veteran
Thought I would share an experience with some taxidermy gone wrong and why it is so important to choose the right taxidermist.
I hunted SA in 2012 and got some decent trophies and memories. Waited the normal 12 months until the finished trophies turned up at my door...
Didn't really like the quality of work and the fact that some of the work werent done right.. (wrong trophy mounted with skin and the other way around)
Didn't think about it so much as I didn't have room to put up most of the trophies.
I recently completed my trophy room in my new house and started to put up the trophies and it was alot worse then I remembered.
4/6 Springbok european mounts missing their nosebone and more due to overcooking. Cooking and all taxidermy work is done on site of safari, actually about 30 steps away from the lodge were we stayed.
Skin on the wrong trophy and the real trophy done as a european mount and not glued properly to the wood plate.
A mount with the tusks from three smallish warthogs where 4/6 tusks had split down the middle and the pieces rattling around in the crate and needed alot of superglue. Some small pieces missing from the tusks aswell.
A halfmount nyala where there was alot of hair missing on a point on the back between the shoulderblades looking like a whirl and also alot of glue or something similar on top of the head around the horns also without any hair. Doubt it was hair slippage as you can see the marks from tools.
My steenbok arrived in the wood crate with one horn broke off and more or less crushed, took me 19 glue joints to put back together.
Photos:
Nyala
Springbok as it arrived
Steenbok when fixed( Right horn on the pic, luckily im a dab hand with the loctite)
Was going to burn the taxidermist in the thread but decided against it as it wouldn't do any good.
More important to make sure future hunters only go to a well renown taxidermist with alot of previously happy customers.
It is equally important as the research you regarding what outfitter you are going to travel with.
For me this is a sad part of the learning curve when you go down to Africa as there is alot of your memories that come back tainted.
What im doing with the mounts:
The springbok mounts are going in the trash as soon as I need the space.
I will save the horns on the Nyala for lampstands or similar and use the rest of the mount for target practise with my 470NE.
Guess I will have to go shoot a new one if a real big one comes around when I'm next down for hunting. Until then the photos will have to go up.
The warthog tusks will go up on my "pig wall" anyway.
The Steenbok will go up on the wall together with the other tiny ten mounts when they arrive. Atleast until I get to shoot another one for a full mount this time (last one was shot with a 300wm which made it explode)
So do your due diligence when it comes to taxidermy otherwise you might be in for a bad experience when the trophies arrive home.
Will disclose the name of the taxidermist if Brickburn or any mod wants me too. Will also add some more photos later.
I hunted SA in 2012 and got some decent trophies and memories. Waited the normal 12 months until the finished trophies turned up at my door...
Didn't really like the quality of work and the fact that some of the work werent done right.. (wrong trophy mounted with skin and the other way around)
Didn't think about it so much as I didn't have room to put up most of the trophies.
I recently completed my trophy room in my new house and started to put up the trophies and it was alot worse then I remembered.
4/6 Springbok european mounts missing their nosebone and more due to overcooking. Cooking and all taxidermy work is done on site of safari, actually about 30 steps away from the lodge were we stayed.
Skin on the wrong trophy and the real trophy done as a european mount and not glued properly to the wood plate.
A mount with the tusks from three smallish warthogs where 4/6 tusks had split down the middle and the pieces rattling around in the crate and needed alot of superglue. Some small pieces missing from the tusks aswell.
A halfmount nyala where there was alot of hair missing on a point on the back between the shoulderblades looking like a whirl and also alot of glue or something similar on top of the head around the horns also without any hair. Doubt it was hair slippage as you can see the marks from tools.
My steenbok arrived in the wood crate with one horn broke off and more or less crushed, took me 19 glue joints to put back together.
Photos:
Nyala
Springbok as it arrived
Steenbok when fixed( Right horn on the pic, luckily im a dab hand with the loctite)
Was going to burn the taxidermist in the thread but decided against it as it wouldn't do any good.
More important to make sure future hunters only go to a well renown taxidermist with alot of previously happy customers.
It is equally important as the research you regarding what outfitter you are going to travel with.
For me this is a sad part of the learning curve when you go down to Africa as there is alot of your memories that come back tainted.
What im doing with the mounts:
The springbok mounts are going in the trash as soon as I need the space.
I will save the horns on the Nyala for lampstands or similar and use the rest of the mount for target practise with my 470NE.
Guess I will have to go shoot a new one if a real big one comes around when I'm next down for hunting. Until then the photos will have to go up.
The warthog tusks will go up on my "pig wall" anyway.
The Steenbok will go up on the wall together with the other tiny ten mounts when they arrive. Atleast until I get to shoot another one for a full mount this time (last one was shot with a 300wm which made it explode)
So do your due diligence when it comes to taxidermy otherwise you might be in for a bad experience when the trophies arrive home.
Will disclose the name of the taxidermist if Brickburn or any mod wants me too. Will also add some more photos later.