Scientific Anglers Mastery

For More Scientific Anglers Mastery Info Click On The Blue Links Below

150754522050 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
SCIENTIFIC ANGLERS SA MASTERY BONEFISH WF 6 F 6 WT FORWARD FLOATING FLY LINE
US $69.95
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
200669197407 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
NEW Scientific Anglers Mastery Streamer Express 30 Head 450 gr Free Shipping
US $69.95
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
190639323885 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers Mastery Series Fly Line Dry Tip Tech WF3F Lightly Used
US $29.99
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
400270134962 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers Mastery Bonefish Fly Line WF8F Blue
US $69.95
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
380409000094 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Fly Fishing Scientific Anglers WF 7 F Mastery Fly Line Saltwater
US $10.50
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
380409000093 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers WF 13 F Mastery Series Saltwater Fly Line
US $10.51
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
140699132499 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Angler Mastery Series Trout Specialty Line
US $49.99
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
140697110968 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers WF 6 F Mastery Series Saltwater Fly Line
US $10.50
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
140697110962 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers WF 6 F S Mastery Series Wet Tip V Fly Line
US $34.33
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
380409000095 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers WF 6 7 F Mastery Series Spey Fly Line
US $17.50
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
380409000091 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers WF 7 F S Mastery Series Wet Tip II Fly Line
US $10.50
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
380409000092 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers WF 9 F S Mastery Series Wet Tip V Fly Line
US $10.51
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
200711298547 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers Mastery Series Tropic Express WF 350 S
US $24.50
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
200711299057 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers Mastery Series Bonefish WF 8 S
US $24.50
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
260950510454 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
NIB Scientific Anglers Mastery Series Clear Wet Tip Fly Fish Line WF 7 F S
US $24.95
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
160607304921 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Angler MASTERY Headstart WF 4 F Yellow
US $24.95
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
230743182599 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Scientific Anglers 8 wt WF 8 F Mastery Saltwater Fly Line
US $21.00
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
230743214408 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
New Scientific Anglers Mastery series 7wt clear Sinking Bonefish Taper
US $30.00
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
140699149441 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Fly Fishing Line Scientific Anglers Mastery Series XPS taper WF 8 F
US $30.00
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery
170779302289 0 Scientific Anglers Mastery
Loop Evotec G4 7 9 Fly Reel NEW with Scientific Anglers Mastery GPX WF 8 Line
US $127.50
ebaygif Scientific Anglers Mastery

The word "taxidermy" comes from the Greek "taxis" for arrangement and "derma" for skin. Taxidermy grew from the tanning industry where, by the 1700s, almost every town had at least one tannery. First practiced in the 1800s, taxidermy is the art of mounting dead animals, including humans occasionally, for display. It began when proud hunters began bringing their trophies to upholstery shops to be stuffed. This is where we got the term "stuff animal," although most professional taxidermists would take exception if you called their work "stuffing" instead of "mounting."

Taxidermy is a controversial practice, particularly when the dead animal is used as a trophy, and it appears to be in decline in modern culture. Still, most of the business caters to homeowners, though many taxidermists prepare animals for museums, scientific labs, and zoological displays. To be a taxidermist, one must be well-educated in the areas of anatomy and dissection, painting and sculpture, and tanning.

Because the process of taxidermy relies on having a solid structure with which to work, the practice is usually limited to animals with backbones. In rare instances, taxidermists has involved other creatures like insects, a much more complicated task.

Since the early 20th Century, taxidermy has progressed as a science and an art. Since the goal is to preserve the life-like qualities of an animal, taxidermists continuously seek to improve their skills and procedures, and technological advances have contributed greatly to the profession. If you are a sportsman and want to have your catch mounted, you need to know how to prepare your animal properly to assure your taxidermist can achieve the most life-like treatment possible.

A common technique taxidermists use is freezing the animal. Using a large freezer, similar to that used by butchers, they freeze the animal carcass completely. Once a hard freeze is achieved, the skin is removed and set aside to be tanned later on. The animal's tissue, muscle, and bone are then coated with plaster of Paris, creating a cast of the animal from which a foam sculpture is made. The skin is tanned and then placed on the foam sculpture, and other elements like glass eyes and false teeth are added to create a life-like effect.

A branch of taxidermy, known as "rogue taxidermy," creates fantastical creatures. It is the art of preparing animal-like replicas of animals that do not in fact exist. Their customers are often museums of the bizarre and unusual, and they play on the buying public's vivid imaginations. Thought to be the creative entertainment form of the art, rogue taxidermists need the same set of skills as their more worldly counterparts.

Akin to rogue taxidermy, crypto-taxidermy tries to create or re-create animals that may exist or that have long gone extinct. Examples include woolly mammoths and dinosaurs used by natural history museums. Based on skeletons discovered by archeologists and anthropologists, crypto-taxidermists create life-like forms used in scientific study and education.

A form of taxidermy that was popular in the Victorian era of the 19th Century is called anthromorphic taxidermy. In this form, mounted animals were dressed and displayed as if doing human activities.

Hunters take their kill to taxidermists in order to preserve that moment of victory when they took the animal down. Common especially among big game hunters, they use the meat for food and safe the skin and fur for trophies. Another popular approach is to have a part of the body, like the head, mounted for display.

The stereotypical idea of the "Great White Hunter" popularized by Hollywood brings to mind whole rooms filled with large complete animals posed in challenge or combat. Elephants with trunks raised and tusks bared, giant Grizzly bears poised for attack, and large cats ready to pounce on their prey are popularized, but rare, taxidermy results. The serious professional taxidermist is a highly-skilled artisan.

Abhishek is an avid Fishing enthusiast and he has got some great Fishing Secrets up his sleeves! Download his FREE 116 Page Ebook, "Fishing Mastery!" from his website http://www.Fishing-Masters.com/772/index.htm. Only limited Free Copies available.

Many thanks for reading our Scientific Anglers Mastery article

Tagged with: