Quote Originally Posted by Foxgun Tom View Post
The wearing of badger skin or badger mask sporrans is not illegal in UK, or banned!! If a badger is legally obtained ie: roadkill? or death by natural cause's its carcass can be mounted (taxidermy) or or made into a full mask sporran, Badgers are unique in the UK in the sense that they have! they're own specific legislation "Protection of Badgers Act 1992" If your lucky enough to come across a dead badger which is the result of a collision with a car on the highway, put it in the boot/trunk of your car and drive to the nearest police station. Give the police the details of where you found the badger, its condition and explain your intended use eg: made up into a sporran or mounted for taxidermy, The police will then issue with an incident number! you then give this document to a sporran maker/taxidermist who then informs DEFRA (the dept of the environment and farming) that the badger was legally obtained and is the result of a road traffic accident. Defra will then issue a document stating that the specimen is in the system and legal!! the taxidermist/sporran maker can then carry out his work without interference The document issued by DEFRA is given to the sporran owner as proof and right of possesion of the sporran. This only applies to specimens obtained after 1992, Earlier specimens obtained before 1992 don't require documentation. Similar legislation covers the use of Otters, Wildcats etc: These animals may not be hunted or killed and are fully protected, but if they're obtained because of road traffic accident? the law in the UK allows their use under the strictest of circumstances

Tom
Wow, great information. I was obviously wrongly informed back in the 60's.

Being unable to treat a skin myself, the animal would probably be rotting by the time I found someone to do it and if not it would be a very expensive sporran after paying someone to skin and cure the skin and then a sporran maker to custom make a sporran.

So probably not for me, but thanks for the information Tom.

Peter