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Turkey fan mount question

Hedgelj

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Mohicanish
For my first turkey I did a homemade fan mount. I pinned the tail feathers out onto a piece of cardboard and put a VERY HEAVY amount of salt on any exposed flesh. I let it sit like that for months and then trimmed it down, added additional salt as necessary and mounted it to one of the tail feather mounts you can buy in stores. Hung it in my basement and then I hung it in my garage when we moved to the new house as I had no better place to put it. I just realized 1/2 of the feathers have fallen off and I now only have half a fan mount.

Any ideas? It wasn't a huge bearded Tom but it was my first bird and its sad.
 

Gern186

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NW Ohio Tundra
Don't pin the feathers. Use binder clips to hold them in place on some heavy cardboard. Use borax. Trim as much meat off the base of the fan as you can prior to applying the borax. Once the fan is spread out, lay a piece of wood or something over it with a little weight to it to flatten out the tail fan and hold it flat. Let it dry for a couple weeks or more. Add borax as needed. Apply some borax to the base of the beard also.
 

Isaacorps

Member
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Columbus
Don't use salt, it only dries it and doesn't cure it for long term. Use Borax, it's a detergent and will cure it for years and years to come. Trim most of the extra meat off and cover it liberally for a good month.

Don't pin the feathers. Use binder clips to hold them in place on some heavy cardboard. Use borax. Trim as much meat off the base of the fan as you can prior to applying the borax. Once the fan is spread out, lay a piece of wood or something over it with a little weight to it to flatten out the tail fan and hold it flat. Let it dry for a couple weeks or more. Add borax as needed. Apply some borax to the base of the beard also.
This. Borax is the way to go. It will also get destroyed by critters if left in an unconditioned space such as a garage
 
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Hunter II

Junior Member
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Instead of binder clips or nailing the tail flat, you can use a clothes hanger with the clips on it. Clip it to the last feather on each side and hang it up to dry. Besides using borax I always give my tails a good spray of insecticide. They have mites that will attack your other taxidermy.
 

Fletch

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Borax is definitely the way to go... I have tails up in my attic from the 80's ( probably older than @Hedgelj ) LOL Just was looking at them yesterday and they are rock solid... That attic gets extremely hot in the summer and cold in the winter... I always just sprinkled Borax on the meat placed tail on cardboard with a heavy book or something holding feathers fanned out...
 

triple_duece

Ragin Cajun.
9,178
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Clean down to quills, borax heavy, let dry in position you prefer. Bugs, and worse than that is humidity. If you didn’t clean good enough it mostly rotted and that was your biggest problem
 

Fletch

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Here ya go... Went up and took a pic... This tail was from 1982... Been in the attic since... Why??? Just no room to hang them too much other things in a 12 x 12 room.... Tail don't look bad for its age and the fact the pile of tails had boxes etc. piled on it .. I tugged on feathers and they are rock solid.... Something did eat some of the small feathers around the base, probably mice.... But like everyone has said Borax....
PXL_20230406_142739211.jpg
 

CJD3

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NE Ohio
Borax works great on snake skins too.
When done, they are like a thick piece of parchment.
 

triple_duece

Ragin Cajun.
9,178
159
Well I fugged up and forgot to take pics. We had 3 fans to cleanup and mount. Hunter was learning and doing his first so I was all in teaching him and forgot to take pics. Sorry fellas, maybe we will get a few more idk.
 

jagermeister

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Ohio
Another vote for borax. It’s all I’ve ever used.

Also, look closely to see if the feathers truly “fell” out, or were they chewed off. Mice absolutely love feathers, and will target a turkey fan like you wouldn’t believe. I kept a couple fans in my old garage in a spot up high where I thought they would be safe. Nope. Mice got to them and completely destroyed them. I was finding feathers in all sorts of nooks and crannies in that garage for quite a while.