Soft vs. Hard Bases and How to Tell the Difference

Sabre

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I have often seen in threads on here that someone will see an animal like a gemsbok and say the bases are still soft and/or green and that it was young.

I can see secondary growth, and I understand that is an indicator that the animal is mature. But, what are you looking at when there isn't secondary growth and you say the bases are either hard or soft, especially in a photo. Because to me, they look the same. And I have seen photos where there wasn't any obvious secondary growth and it was a very large specimen and no one said anything about the bases being soft.

I will post a photo of one example from this site of a large gemsbok that the person stated was very large, and it certainly appears to be in the photo, but there doesn't appear to be obvious secondary growth in the photo.

Maybe people responding could post photos with examples of soft bases and hard bases to help me understand.

Thanks.
 
GEMSBOK.jpeg
 
I’m not your man on hard vs soft on gemsbok, but iffen I’d seen THAT gemsbok, imma shooting. :cool:
 
First off a lot of comments are incorrect especially on the recent thread I think you are referring too. You won’t see secondary growth in all trophies. It’s an indication the animal is very old not just maturity. It’s been mature for a few years prior to that. I’m also uncertain if secondary growth occurs in all species or all areas or if is dependent on certain factors. If you get trophies home that have yellowish bases it was still growing. Here are some examples I have. All are good trophies with hard bases but you can see a difference of a more prime trophy vs a very old trophy. The secondary growth on sable is clear to see.
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Also a lot of gemsbok shot as trophies are cows such as the one in the photo you posted. You’ll note the thin bases and long horns. Both my photos are bulls usually thicker straighter horns and much thicker bases.
 
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Here are some trophies from my garage. You can see the yellowish soft bases on animals I wouldn’t consider a good trophy now that I know more. Unfortunately, there is incentive to harvest game animals as a crop before they are old. Particularly in areas with commercial game farming.
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First off a lot of comments are incorrect especially on the recent thread I think you are referring too.

I wasn't referencing any specific recent thread. I just feel like I've seen it a lot where in judging threads or where people ask about age of animals someone will comment that the bases are still soft or green.

I can spot the secondary growth fairly easily as I suspect most people can. But oftentimes people will say the animal is still soft or green at the base, and I don't really see a difference.

In your photos of your taxidermy euro mounts it is quite obvious what you are talking about, and I really appreciate you posting those photos.

Do you have photos of what those animals looked like after the shot, like trophy photos? It might be really helpful to compare, especially on those hartebeest.

Thanks again.
 
Do you have photos of what those animals looked like after the shot, like trophy photos? It might be really helpful to compare, especially on those hartebeest.

Thanks again.
Here is hartebeest with the yellowish bases. It’s technically the longest red hartebeest I’ve shot. From Limpopo.
IMG_5750.png
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Here is hartebeest with hard bases from previous photo. It should be noted though it isn’t an old hartebeest but mature. This photo looks like bases had a little more to go. From NW Namibia.
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Here’s another one from this year. A little older but a lot more worn down. PH said because of density of hartebeest on property and bulls fighting. From central Namibia.
IMG_5752.jpeg
 

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