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He breathes life into dead animals

India's last taxidermist keeps on stuffing
Last Updated : 02 July 2016, 18:40 IST
Last Updated : 02 July 2016, 18:40 IST

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Gaikwad takes around eight months to prepare a big cat

When Santosh Gaikwad, India's last-known practising taxidermist, first started stuffing animals 13 years ago he would keep dead birds in his family's freezer at home, much to his wife's consternation.

Now, as the head of India's only taxidermy centre, he enjoys the use of two deep freezers large enough to hold a lion at the government-run workshop in Mumbai's national park. “I had no option but to keep the dead birds in the home freezer,” Gaikwad said. Among other things, his centre  has a snarling leopard, Bengal tiger and two contented-looking lionesses.

“My wife was afraid because we didn't know how they had died. She thought food might get infected. So I wrapped them in two or three plastic bags, air-tight,” he said. Back then, Gaikwad would take birds from Mumbai's Bombay Veterinary College where he still works as a professor in the anatomy department. Now he has built up such a reputation he receives a continuous supply of animals from state governments and pet owners.

Taxidermy, popular in British colonial times, may conjure up images of Indian maharajas killing tigers and proudly displaying their stuffed carcasses in their lavish palaces. But India's Wildlife Protection Act 1972 outlawed the hunting of wild animals and taxidermy trophies.

Instead, 42-year-old Gaikwad stuffs animals that have suffered a natural or accidental death and is inundated with requests to prepare animals for museums and for grieving pet lovers. It may seem a strange hobby to some but “there's a lot of demand” said Gaikwad, clad in a green surgical gown at the national taxidermy centre, opened in 2009 in Mumbai's lush Sanjay Gandhi National Park.

Gaikwad, who is the only person authorised by the Union government to stuff wild animals, explains that “taxidermy is the combination of five arts-- sculpture, painting, carpentry, cobbler and anatomy.”

He skins the animal soon after death. Any remaining flesh is then carefully removed. Measurements are taken of the animal's body mass and a cast replica is prepared based on the original skeleton. The real skin is then placed on the mannequin and the finishing touches put in place -- glass eyes, perhaps whiskers and finally the stuffed creature is mounted.

He says he has stuffed 13 big cats, including a Siberian tiger, a Himalayan black bear, more than 500 birds, including a Great Indian Bustard, and at least 100 fish and reptiles. He also has to his credit one Bengal tiger in Madhya Pradesh, one snow leopard and one leopard  in Gujarat, one elephant head in Gadchiroli in Maharashtra, soft shell narrow head turtle from the Pune Forest Department.

Van Ingen & Van Ingen, who were taxidermists of German origin during the British era, were active in Mysuru till a couple of decades ago. Their mounted hunting trophies were known for their beauty and their customers included maharajas.

Gaikwad charges owners up to Rs 3,000  to stuff an exotic bird and between Rs 10,000 and 18,000 for a dog, depending on breed and size.

In 2014, Mumbai resident Susmita Mallik paid him to stuff her large German Shepherd Bruno after it died of a heart attack. She said the dog was “like a child” to her. “I just couldn't think of losing him,” she said. She is very happy and satisfied that now Bruno looks “exactly” the same as when he was alive. “He is in the living room. I can touch him and brush him. It makes us feel he is with us,” the 43-year-old said.

It takes Gaikwad around eight months to prepare a big cat as he has to balance his work with his responsibilities at the veterinary college. Born in Kudosi in Ratnagiri district of Maharashtra, Gaikwad has come a long way since his interest in the ancient art was piqued by a visit to the natural history section of Mumbai's main museum in 2003.

“The animals were so realistic that I wanted to learn how to do it but nobody was teaching so I started by searching on the internet,” Gaikwad recalled. “An assistant to a British taxidermist told me the procedure and from what I learnt from that person and Google I started to make incisions on birds.” Those initial attempts were unsuccessful though.

“Bird skin is very thin and often it would tear,” he explained. After mastering birds and fish, the former veterinarian moved on to cats and dogs before progressing to larger land mammals. Gaikwad says there is no single taxidermy course in India that accompanies all of the five disciplines, and claims to be the only one practising taxidermy on mammals.  He has conducted classes for students in some colleges on the subject.

“There is no next generation. It's a worry,” Parag Dhakate, an animal conservationist, said.

Gaikwad was upset when a devastating fire at India's natural history museum in New Delhi in April destroyed rare specimens of flora and fauna, lamenting the damage done as “a great loss to education”.

He sees his work as important to preserving knowledge of India's wildlife particularly if it's an endangered species. “These are national treasures. If we burn them then we cannot see these animals again and their beauty will have permanently disappeared. “Taxidermy is the optimal utilisation of that dead body. It's a rebirth. It's life after death."


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Published 02 July 2016, 16:48 IST

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