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Breathe New Life Into a Bear Habitat

Breathe New Life Into a Bear Habitat

BY SCENES-N-NATURE

We recently received a black bear mount requiring restoration. This more than 20-year-old mount was the first bear ever taken by this Missouri hunter and holds a special place in his heart. He killed it while bow hunting for elk with his dad. As the living room’s main attraction, this mount has been present for years of family get-togethers and holidays. The bear had accumulated additional injuries over the years, mostly at the hands of four young, rowdy boys. Odds are the youngsters rode on its back from time to time. BBs were also found in the base of the mount. This evidence proved at least some of the damage was a result of multiple living room BB gun ambushes, likely from behind the couch.

TO RENEW OR SUBSCRIBE, CALL 800-783-7266.

Monday, July 12, 2021/Author: Administrator Account/Number of views (3820)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: 4.3
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Waterfowl Photo Reference Study: Wigeons

BY LARRY BLOMQUIST

There are recognizable differences in these three species of wigeons found mainly different regions of the world. The one physical trait that remains similar is the bill color of the three, and both the males and females of the three species have this common trait.

Another interesting fact is that the rusty-headed Eurasian wigeon turns up as a rarity in flocks of American wigeons on occasion, but American wigeons also turn up in Europe in flocks of Eurasian wigeons.

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Monday, July 12, 2021/Author: Administrator Account/Number of views (3304)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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Elephant Puzzle: How to Fit an Elephant Through a 70-Inch-by-80-Inch Hallway

Elephant Puzzle: How to Fit an Elephant Through a 70-Inch-by-80-Inch Hallway

BY SKIP SKIDMORE

One day I was presented with a challenge to mount a lifesize elephant which could be taken apart, so it would not be required to be permanently displayed. The elephant was to be transported down a hallway 70 inches wide and 80 inches tall. The request by the director of the Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum at Brigham Young University set in motion this article. While visiting the Woodbury Taxidermy exhibition booth at an annual Safari Club International convention, I met chief taxidermist Jimmy Dieringer. As I perused his photo albums, I saw a picture of an elephant form in eight pieces, namely, the head, trunk, two body halves, and four legs. Using this form could work for my new challenging museum project!

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Monday, July 12, 2021/Author: Administrator Account/Number of views (3327)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: 4.0
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Locked in Death

BY DICKIE AND KATHY WOOTEN

The hunter did a double-take—was it really what he thought it was? In plain sight were two long-dead skulls of two whitetail bucks, locked forever, from a battle old as time. The hunter, Wes Archer, one of my long-time clients, told me of his find. I told him that many years ago I had mounted a pair like that with a lot of difficulty. Ten years passed. Wes took the skulls out of his closet, walked in my shop with them, and said, “Let’s do the damn thing.” Taxidermists learn every day, and trial-and-error must be prominent in our DNA. All locked bucks are not locked alike!

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Monday, July 12, 2021/Author: Administrator Account/Number of views (2810)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: No rating
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Painting a Bluegill

Painting a Bluegill

BY LARRY BLOMQUIST

A bluegill probably represents a fisherman’s first fish over other species of freshwater fish. They are fun to catch, great to eat, and make very attractive mounts. When I was building my taxidermy clientele back in the early 1960s and 1970s, I completed three stringer mounts of bluegills, with a few other members of the sunfish family added in. They were displayed with my name attached in the three largest sporting goods retailers in my area. Bluegills are easy to skin, mount and paint, and stringer mounts represent what most freshwater fishermen bring home from the rivers and bayous here in Louisiana. I cannot begin to calculate how much fish taxidermy these three displays brought to my growing business. Even though bass were number one on my volume list, bluegills were number two, followed by crappies. That’s because I would get 10 to 12 stringer mounts of bluegill to do every year, with 5 to 7 fish on each stringer.

TO RENEW OR SUBSCRIBE, CALL 800-783-7266.

Monday, July 12, 2021/Author: Administrator Account/Number of views (3817)/Comments (0)/ Article rating: 2.5
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