Horn-only mounts?

Carved skulls can be very nice additions to any room. I've also seen film dipped skulls and other trophies that were very well done. It's not expensive, and there are plenty of people who can do it.
 
@Rubberhead , what extra permit is needed for a warthog? I know there’s extra screening for swine, birds and primates by USDA I believe. Granted I haven’t imported pigs or primates since 2022, things do change though .

"Permit" might not be the exact right word. When my importer asked about what was in my shipment, I just listed the animals. He said something to the effect that it would take an extra step because of the warthog skull. When I told him it was just the tusk, he said something like "good, that will make it easier". Maybe someone here knows exactly why.
 
A horn mount can evoke the timeless charm of "Old Africa" and serve as a meaningful keepsake from your safari adventures. I highly recommend bringing home the skull of your zebra. Having taken two myself, I made the decision to preserve their skulls before even setting out on my first safari. A zebra skull makes for a distinctive mount and an excellent conversation piece.
 
There is no "extra permit" for warhogs or monkeys. All it is, is they require a brief quarantine period once in the states prior to shipping to a USDA facility. It is because they are trying to prevent the spread of certain diseases primates and swine carry that we do not have or do not currently have a problem with here in the states. People make way bigger of deal out of it than it is. In the zillions of imports that come to us for treatment and taxidermy I have never (knock on wood) had any issues due to either species. It's a simple 10 day (if I remember correctly) quarantine and that's it. There is a lot of misinformation out there, there is literally nothing to it. Any decent broker should have absolutely no problem with it. If they do you need a new broker.
 
There is no "extra permit" for warhogs or monkeys. All it is, is they require a brief quarantine period once in the states prior to shipping to a USDA facility. It is because they are trying to prevent the spread of certain diseases primates and swine carry that we do not have or do not currently have a problem with here in the states. People make way bigger of deal out of it than it is. In the zillions of imports that come to us for treatment and taxidermy I have never (knock on wood) had any issues due to either species. It's a simple 10 day (if I remember correctly) quarantine and that's it. There is a lot of misinformation out there, there is literally nothing to it. Any decent broker should have absolutely no problem with it. If they do you need a new broker.
I believe bird specimens also require quarantine at US entry?
 
In hindsight, I wish I had done a Euro of my zebra. Having seen several since my hunt, i definitely regret it. Very unique skull mount.
 
There is no "extra permit" for warhogs or monkeys. All it is, is they require a brief quarantine period once in the states prior to shipping to a USDA facility. It is because they are trying to prevent the spread of certain diseases primates and swine carry that we do not have or do not currently have a problem with here in the states. People make way bigger of deal out of it than it is. In the zillions of imports that come to us for treatment and taxidermy I have never (knock on wood) had any issues due to either species. It's a simple 10 day (if I remember correctly) quarantine and that's it. There is a lot of misinformation out there, there is literally nothing to it. Any decent broker should have absolutely no problem with it. If they do you need a new broker.

On a hunt last year a guy tried to convince me not to shoot a warthog. He told me that I needed to listen to him because he shot a warthog a couple years before and it cost him an extra $15,000+ to get it into the country. I did not believe him. And I told him that it didn't make sense.

I do know that it can hold up your shipment or create some issues if you don't think things through. But $15,000+ made no sense at all.

After he attempted to further explain it, he was lumping in all of his shipping costs from the entire hunt, his freight charges (for all animals), Airport charges for holding his crate, and the cost for a full body taxidermy mount on the warthog stateside. And even with those numbers he still didn't quite get to the $15,000+ he originally claimed.

I didn't listen and of course shot a warthog.
 
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On a hunt last year a guy tried to convince me not to shoot a warthog. He told me that I needed to listen to him because he shot a warthog a couple years before and it cost him an extra $15,000+ to get it into the country. I did not believe him. And I told him that it didn't make sense.

I do know that it can hold up your shipment or create some issues if you don't think things through. But $15,000+ made no sense at all.

After he attempted to further explain it, he was lumping in all of his shipping costs from the entire hunt, his freight charges (for all animals), Airport charges for holding his crate, and the cost for a full body taxidermy mount on the warthog stateside. And even with those numbers he still didn't quite get to the $15,000+ he originally claimed.

I didn't listen and of course shot a warthog.
If you don't use a importer who has a bonded USDA approved warehouse you could be in for some very large storage fees.

The importer that I used in 2023 had both and I encured $0 extra charges for a finished warthog his skull and a baboon
 
If you don't use a importer who has a bonded USDA approved warehouse you could be in for some very large storage fees.

The importer that I used in 2023 had both and I encured $0 extra charges for a finished warthog his skull and a baboon

That is true. I attempted to mitigate the risk of that by having the warthog skull whitened and the hide tanned in SA so it was considered "finished taxidermy". I also used an importer with the approved warehouse, and on their recommendation, I also asked the SA taxidermist to keep the warthog parts in a separate box inside the crate. In case it had to be sent off to a USDA taxidermy facility. But, the SA taxidermist didn't end up getting that part right and only boxed the skull. Either way, it worked out and cost $0 extra for import.
 

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schwerpunkt88 wrote on Robmill70's profile.
Morning Rob, Any feeling for how the 300 H&H shoots? How's the barrel condition?
mrpoindexter wrote on Charlm's profile.
Hello. I see you hunted with Sampie recently. If you don't mind me asking, where did you hunt with him? Zim or SA? And was it with a bow? What did you hunt?

I am possibly going to book with him soon.
Currently doing a load development on a .404 Jeffrey... it's always surprising to load .423 caliber bullets into a .404 caliber rifle. But we love it when we get 400 Gr North Fork SS bullets to 2300 FPS, those should hammer down on buffalo. Next up are the Cutting Edge solids and then Raptors... load 200 rounds of ammo for the customer and on to the next gun!
 
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