Just hate to see people put down the product before they even know how it works. I wouldn't do that to anyone else's business.
Thank you for your constructive Critsizm. I take it all in. Hopefully someday we can change your mind.Are you trying to tell me that you are a better person? Or are you trying to shame me into keeping my mouth shut?
I don't think you're honest. I talk bad about the sales of heroin... never used it. I think Ferrari's are overpriced... I've never driven one. Welcome to America... it's called Capitalism. Someone produces a product for sale, another person has a want/need and believes the product is priced right for them, they buy it.
I'd hope that as a businessman you'd embrace skepticism/criticism. It's a great way to promote your product and get the word out. Pissing people off probably won't work as well.
Promoting your product on taxidermy.net is an excellent idea. I'd love to follow that thread and hear from the experts. Maybe my mind could be changed... or not. Good luck with your sales. Ed F
Interesting. Good to hear. I have a hard time seeing how it works and replaces the blood under the velvet. But maybe it doesUpdate on this. Shot a full velvet mule deer in Colorado in early-mid September and used only Velvalok on it in the field until I was able to get it back to Wisconsin to my taxidermist. He was impressed with how well it had worked and had never heard of it. He was still going to do his normal preservation practices to it but I think it did the job for my intended purpose.
I have a fork my boy killed last week and its like hard horned underneath like a stag im wandering if need to preserve it at all. I was just going to cover boil and bleachI am curious about this because I have velvet racks that are 10 years old hanging inside my barn and they look the same as they did on the buck without doing anything to them. However, I was fortunate enough to get a mountable buck last year that severely damaged his velvet when he hit a tree. I ended up having the rack skinned and shipped off to get it flocked to recreate the velvet and make it last forever.
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That’s a great point. At the very least, it should in theory extend the timeline for getting the rack home and to your taxidermist.Update on this. Shot a full velvet mule deer in Colorado in early-mid September and used only Velvalok on it in the field until I was able to get it back to Wisconsin to my taxidermist. He was impressed with how well it had worked and had never heard of it. He was still going to do his normal preservation practices to it but I think it did the job for my intended purpose.
I’ve used Velvalok one time on a velvet mule deer. It worked great. Three years later, the velvet is still in perfect condition. I used over half of a 12 ounce spray bottle to treat one mule deer rack. It’s not a huge rack either, just a big fork buck.This is an old dead post....BUT, I was curious if anyone had any knowledge on how many elk racks you could treat with a bottle of Velva Lock? Obviously the size of the rack would come into play but let's say they're like 250-280" elk? Is one bottle enough for two elk? How far does a bottle go?
I’ve used the velvalok on bucks that were close to stripping velvet and had decent results. Otherwise I’ve injected them. But, after talking with another taxidermist who does several velvet deer a year and seeing the results in person, freeze drying is the best method to preserve them and keep the full look as well as keeping the hair stood up.The question I have regarding Velvalok is not if it will cure/preserve but does it keep the natural full fluffed look or cause the velvet to lie down! I bought some but hesitant to use because I am hearing and reading Freeze dry is best to preserve the natural look of velvet. Anyone have input or feedback based on experience please?