Velvet, Antelope & the Art of Taxidermy
On this episode, we’re talking shop with Bradley LeBaron of Coots Taxidermy, a guy who’s been grinding away for close to a decade, turning hides, horns, and capes into lasting pieces of art. We dig into what it takes to keep velvet antlers from rotting off in the heat, why antelope are both the most beautiful and most fragile critters to work on, and why cheap mounts almost always look like a stuffed sock.
Bradley walks us through the nuts and bolts: caping an antelope in the field without butchering it, salting hides in the desert, dealing with maggots and stink-fees, and why your taxidermist might just be the first line of defense for conservation. From helping with CWD testing to spotting illegal kills, taxidermists end up seeing a side of wildlife management most folks never think about.
We get into competition mounts, grizzly bears, and the fine line between art and science. And, like every good hunting story, there’s some hard-earned advice in here: treat your cape like meat, keep it cool, and respect the animal all the way through the process.
If you’ve ever wondered what separates a mount that lasts a lifetime from one that makes you cringe every time you walk past it, this conversation will set you straight.