Yes, the trophies are at the taxidermist! We went down there today to open the crate and check them out.
At first glance, I thought, how'd they fit 7 animals in that small crate!
After Ron Gomez, my taxidermist at West Coast Taxidermy, opened the crate, I saw the creative packing job they did. Ron was happy. Since he was happy, so was I.
They had taken the horns of the kudu, gemsbok, and bushbuck off the skulls. This saved space, using a smaller crate saved me money.
All the trophies laid out to compare against the packing list...everything checked out. Kudu, gemsbok, bushbuck, blue wildebeest, red hartebeest, two impala...
capes and flatskins.
So, in three months I'll have the euro mounts of the wildebeest, hartebeest, and impala. Shortly after the tanning will be completed on the flatskins for the wildebeest and hartebeest rugs and the capes for the kudu, gemsbok, and bushbuck mounts.
For the first time Africa hunters, like me, the best thing I did for my trophies was to meet with my taxidermist before going and discussing what I was going to shoot, and what I was going to do with it when I brought it back. No surprises, unless of course you shoot more than you thought you would!
Tanning fees here amounts to $600 for the capes and flatskins. The two flatskins are trophies for me so I can live with the cost there. The tanning is extra above the fee for the mount. The taxidermy will end up costing about $5k when the work is done. So, check out the top post, add up the costs for dip and pack, shipping, then go to the next post I made in the thread, add in broker fees (unless you have time to do that part yourself), then add in the tanning and mount fees that your taxidermist quotes you.
All that adds up to almost $7k just to get the seven trophies over here from Africa and into the trophy room, AFTER you've paid for the airfare, trophy fees, hunt days, gifts and souvenirs, tips for the staff and guides, side trips, passports, and all that gear you had to have...
It was one heck of a trip, that's for sure