Skull Mounting help!!!
#11
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 15
Likes: 0
I just got my 3 finished up. The boiling is the quickest way, but I could not stand the smell. I buried mine under my deck and left it there over the winter. When the ground was finally unfrozen I dug them all up. Clean as a whistle. I then glued all the cracks so nothing fell off. After this wipe em down with peroxide. When buried I never could smell anything and there were 3 deer heads under my deck.
#12
Hey according to Gil Grissom on CSI last nite, if you let the skull sit in raw sewage, the flesh and such will rot twenty times faster than normal?
I dunno but it would be a good test to see if the stuff they do on that show is bunk or not.
Seriously, my local taxidermist Boils them, don't know all the details though.
I dunno but it would be a good test to see if the stuff they do on that show is bunk or not.
Seriously, my local taxidermist Boils them, don't know all the details though.
#13
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 527
Likes: 0
From: Lingle WY USA
I have Dermestid beetles and they are BY FAR the easiest to use......Not quite as fast as boiling but YUCK!! What a pain.....Beetle will clean a deer skull in 2-10 days (it depends on how "hot" the colony is at the time...if you catch it just right it can clean a deer skull in 24 hours but that is unusually fast).........I will never go back to boiling......
#15
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 527
Likes: 0
From: Lingle WY USA
Actually the easiest way is to find a carcass and pick your own but then you have to deal with infestations of mites, etc. School supply houses have them. I use Carolina Biological..... www. carolina.com ..... Type in dermestid and it will come up........$17 for an assorted set which has beetles, larvea and pupa ( I would get 2 to start a colony)........Lot's of info on the net on proper containers....I personally use big plastic containers (100 quart w/ lid) from wal-mart and card board for the bedding material.....If you don't have skulls to clean they like high protien dog food......They have to be kept between 70-80 degrees if you want them to eat and cold temps <40 degrees will kill them so you have to have a place inside for them.....
#16
Thanks CG. I will check into that. Not sure if the wife will let me have them in the house. I get a feeling I will have to wait until summer and they can be kept outside.




