I’d like to see if anyone has done this with Stylocoeniella. Op, you’re talking about an actual squirrel skull? How was it cleaned?
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Sorry, not OP. Was reading two threads and I’m getting confused lol.I’d like to see if anyone has done this with Stylocoeniella. Op, you’re talking about an actual squirrel skull? How was it cleaned?
Ooh...my attempt would probably look like an underwater chia pet. So I probably won't.Godzilla GSP. If I tried something, that is.
Wip looks like my hairline :/Hey! That's my skull!
Here is an updated Pic:
Here is another I am "working on"
Epic! Thanks for sharing the pics. They look awsosme!Hey! That's my skull!
Here is an updated Pic:
Here is another I am "working on"
That was me. It was cleaned by leaving it under an overturned clay flowerpot until bugs ate all the flesh off. It was later dipped in a two-part acrylic to seal it, which was probably overkill- bones cleaned by most methods should be at least as inert as limestone, if not more. Boiling won't do it, the fat seeps into the bones and leaches out later- bad for any bone use. But letting it naturally decay down should produce clean enough bones. I had most of that skeleton in a freshwater tank for awhile with no problems. The only reason I'm not putting it in this tank is... mostly just that I can't find where I put it.I’d like to see if anyone has done this with Stylocoeniella. Op, you’re talking about an actual squirrel skull? How was it cleaned?