Hunting trophy






Has worked with taxidermy since childhood and gained retailer experience.
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Six deer skulls as a specimen on a neat trophy plaque, showing six different growth stages of the antlers and originating from Europe, with dimensions about 20 cm high, 15 cm wide and 10 cm deep, six items in good condition and some jaw pieces missing.
Description from the seller
6 beautiful Reebok skulls on a neat trophy shelf
The course of antler growth.
Beautifully designed. By showing a different skull at a more advanced stage of growth each time.
This is how you can really see the antlers take shape!
6 different skulls, a very beautiful and unusual object.
They look good in any interior, a man cave, or as education!
Very easy to mount on the wall.
Not all jaw pieces are included, as shown in the photo.
Nevertheless, they are very beautiful objects to hang in your interior or mancave.
The roe has a sandy yellow to reddish-brown summer coat; in winter, it is more grayish-brown to black. Adult animals have no spots. Clearly visible is the white to yellowish body spot. In males, this spot is quite indistinct in summer. The nose is black, and the chin is white. The tail is quite small (two to four centimeters long) and only visible during defecation. In winter, the female roe, the reegeit, has a bunch of white hairs sticking out behind the hind legs, called the 'schortje.' This looks like a tail, but it is not.
The adult male, the reebok, has a simple antler, usually consisting of two to three points (endings). Reebok bucks with four to five points are rare. The antler is typically about 25 centimeters long. Every year, between October and January, a new antler grows, and the old one falls off. The antler grows under a skin called the velvet, which loosens and is shed once the antler is fully grown between March and June. Occasionally, female reeboks also have antlers.
When the antler has not yet developed branches, it is called a 'reebok' or the antler is a 'spitser'. A 'gaffel' has one branch; this is common around the age of two years. The number of branches is not an indication of age: even a one-year-old, a yearling, can already have a 'gaffel' antler or an antler with six points.
Because it is the real natural skull, it may have a few minor cracks and splits.
both the skull and the horns!
Some teeth or molars can become loose and/or fall out.
This is normal. Refer to photos.
The object is carefully packaged and shipped.
6 beautiful Reebok skulls on a neat trophy shelf
The course of antler growth.
Beautifully designed. By showing a different skull at a more advanced stage of growth each time.
This is how you can really see the antlers take shape!
6 different skulls, a very beautiful and unusual object.
They look good in any interior, a man cave, or as education!
Very easy to mount on the wall.
Not all jaw pieces are included, as shown in the photo.
Nevertheless, they are very beautiful objects to hang in your interior or mancave.
The roe has a sandy yellow to reddish-brown summer coat; in winter, it is more grayish-brown to black. Adult animals have no spots. Clearly visible is the white to yellowish body spot. In males, this spot is quite indistinct in summer. The nose is black, and the chin is white. The tail is quite small (two to four centimeters long) and only visible during defecation. In winter, the female roe, the reegeit, has a bunch of white hairs sticking out behind the hind legs, called the 'schortje.' This looks like a tail, but it is not.
The adult male, the reebok, has a simple antler, usually consisting of two to three points (endings). Reebok bucks with four to five points are rare. The antler is typically about 25 centimeters long. Every year, between October and January, a new antler grows, and the old one falls off. The antler grows under a skin called the velvet, which loosens and is shed once the antler is fully grown between March and June. Occasionally, female reeboks also have antlers.
When the antler has not yet developed branches, it is called a 'reebok' or the antler is a 'spitser'. A 'gaffel' has one branch; this is common around the age of two years. The number of branches is not an indication of age: even a one-year-old, a yearling, can already have a 'gaffel' antler or an antler with six points.
Because it is the real natural skull, it may have a few minor cracks and splits.
both the skull and the horns!
Some teeth or molars can become loose and/or fall out.
This is normal. Refer to photos.
The object is carefully packaged and shipped.
