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Started by djrcm7, April 25, 2017, 12:53:10 PM
Quote from: Bowguy on April 26, 2017, 02:46:12 AMWith frost free freezers you could actually freeze dry it, the quicker the better. Normally I'd skin the head out asap n start the freeze drying on that but for 500-700 it might be a plastic head. I'd also take the fan off n card that. I take the tails off even pheasant n bondo them into form. It makes them rigid/secure the way just pinning them won't. If it was like 6 months or so id not worry. Prob even a bit more but why not bring it to a guy n give the deposit n get it started. Be honest n tell him you need time to get the rest up so he doesn't finish the piece n it sits. Have him call to ensure funds are available before he mounts it. Any taxidermist worth his salt is gonna be almost a year out due to having lots of guys use him. The better you wrap it the less moisture escapes. Birds have very thin skin so don't wait forever
Quote from: GobbleNut on April 27, 2017, 08:53:16 AMReally, it all boils down to what a person can afford and what his expectations are. From what I have seen, most folks don't know a great turkey mount from an average one,...and some don't seem to know an average mount from a really bad one. As others have noted, if you look around a bit, you can likely find someone who will mount a turkey for $400-$500. Take a look at their work, and if it is satisfactory in your eye, that is what matters. Quality relative to price is ultimately in the eyes of the beholder,...and especially in the eye of the holder of the check book.
Quote from: mtns2hunt on April 27, 2017, 11:06:04 AMQuote from: GobbleNut on April 27, 2017, 08:53:16 AMReally, it all boils down to what a person can afford and what his expectations are. From what I have seen, most folks don't know a great turkey mount from an average one,...and some don't seem to know an average mount from a really bad one. As others have noted, if you look around a bit, you can likely find someone who will mount a turkey for $400-$500. Take a look at their work, and if it is satisfactory in your eye, that is what matters. Quality relative to price is ultimately in the eyes of the beholder,...and especially in the eye of the holder of the check book.Perhaps you're right. Who cares how the bird is mounted if the beholder is satisfied. If you have a wad of feathers on the wall representing the bird of a life time. So what if the skin is not tanned/cured right and it starts to rot. The smell will be in the nose of the beholder too! I feel if you kill something that is worth mounting you should mount it right: otherwise its not the bird of a lifetime any more. As far as most folks: don't know an average mount from a really bad one? You are kidding right? Bad mounting is very obvious.
Quote from: Bill Cooksey on April 27, 2017, 12:50:39 PMAt $700, depending on location, you should start finding competent to really good taxidermists. Considering the time and expertise required to do a turkey right, $700 is a heck of a deal. No one will do many turkeys for less, and that means no one with expertise is doing them for less. As someone mentioned, you might luck out with a truly gifted guy who is new to the business and trying to build a reputation, but the odds are against it. Better to take some time to put the money together...I promise it is the best option. I really do get he doesn't have the money in hand, but he has time to put it together if he really wishes.John Beard has been mentioned, and he's the best I know. That doesn't mean some of the MO names you've been given aren't in that class as well. John did my son's first bird a few years ago. A taxidermist I've used for decades turned me onto John. Pat has done one turkey and a bunch of waterfowl for me, and when I called him about doing my son's bird he told me he'd retired from turkeys because they required too much time. John does his turkeys too because my friend can make more money than the mount costs in the time it takes to do one. Hope that adds perspective.