cdngunner, WHERE did you shoot that buck!?!?!? FABULOUS!!!!!!
Back to SignGuy, here is some advice form an old fart that has spent a "few" dollars on taxidermy:
1. If you shoot the trophy of a lifetime, be prepared BEFOREHAND to know how to care for it properly, and have your taxidermist already selected, based on his (her??) work. Quality costs serious cash, and some of the best guys do not take new clients, no matter what you would pay them.
2. You want to know beforehand what you think meets the criteria for "trophy of a lifetime" because when you shoot that gorgeous ten-point whitetail which is the biggest you have ever seen, you are about to spend at least $500, and probably more.
3. HINT: it is probably NOT the trophy of a lifetime.........you have lots of years ahead of you.
4. Before you get a full head and shoulders mount, look at your home: is there any place big enough to display it? I have a nice twelve point white-tail buck mount that is well over three feet from bottom to top, and when I moved to this new place with low ceilings I found out that it looks REALLY stupid to look down on a nice mount..............
5. My favourite mounts, honestly, are the antlers only mounts, in the skull caps, leather over them, mounted on plaques. They look very impressive, do not take up much space, are HUGELY cheaper, and just about anybody can do them without botching the job. Your trophy looks good basically forever, no hair to fall out, no teeth to pull back, etc etc.
6. If after all of this you want the name of the best taxidermist in Ontario and one of the best in the country, send me a note. Warning: he may not take a new client and he sure as heck is not cheap.
Doug