Paper Wild Boar

Size: ….x…x… cm

The Wild Boar kit contains:
  • 2 large colored templates and 1 large white template with the tusks.
  • A test shape to practice, folding and building instructions.
  • Fast drying glue and a folding lath.

Add scissors / a little craft knife and that’s all you need to assemble this Wild Boar yourself!

Login om de prijzen te zien
SKU: Wild Boar Categories: , Tag:

Create your own interior decoration with this 3D paper Wild Boar!

You can now take the mountain spirit into your home decoration in a very animal friendly way. All our paper creations are made with FSC-paper. And so is this 3D paper Wild Boar animal head. Assembling this 3D paper Wild Boar animal head is like a mindful journey. It will keep you busy for a few hours with an amazing result. The feeling of joy when you are ready with assembling this beautiful strong Boar is great!

The Wild Boar kit contains:

  • 2 colored templates and 1 white template with the tusks.
  • A test shape to practice, folding and building instructions.
  • Fast drying glue and a folding lath.

Add scissors/a little craft knife and that’s all you need to assemble this Boar yourself!

Wild Boar facts:

The Scientific name of the Wild Boar is Sus scrofa. Native populations of wild boars can be found in Africa, Europe and Asia (Japan, Indonesia, India and the Far East). Wild boars can survive in different types of habitat: grasslands, taiga, tropical rainforests, but they prefer life in deciduous forests. The wild boar is omnivorous, their menu ranges from fruits, roots and berries to worms and amphibians. But in a good mast year, a year in which trees and shrubs bear more fruit than average, their diet consists of 70-80% beechnuts and acorns.

Wild boars are medium-sized animals. They can reach 3 to 6.5 feet in length, 21.6 to 39.3 inches in height and 90 to 700 pounds in weight. 10 percent of the young only reach the third year of life. Many young wild boars die from hypothermia in their first months. Those who do make it live in the wild between eight and ten years old. In captivity, however, the animals can live up to thirty years.

A fun fact: In the past, hairs from this animal’s neck served as a material for toothbrush production!