Reminds me of the wild boar that a buddy had mounted by a guy at work who probably had never done anything but a deer head. Not only did he put wrinkles in it's nose like a snarling dog, but he blackened it up with shoe polish or stove black or something that made the mount dirtier on the wall than it was on the hoof. I learned that lesson too when I had a Barbarossa sheep mounted buy a local deer head guy. The mechanical picker pulled out about half of the hair so now "Curly" looks more like a lama with horns. A lifetime is too long to look at a cobble job. Choose your taxidermist carefully.


My other auto is a .45

The bitterness of poor quality is remembered long after the sweetness of low price has faded from memory