Emily Felch, the 23-year-old owner and purveyor of Natural Selection in midtown, never thought her penchant for taxidermy would translate to a business. Now, after four years of selling live plants and dead animals, she recently renovated her shop to accommodate more bodies.

So how did you get into taxidermy?

Iโ€™ve always really loved animals, and I was always kind of intrigued by taxidermy, but it didnโ€™t really start until seventh grade. I had read a biography on Theodore Roosevelt, and โ€ฆ I had just learned about people doing taxidermy. But Theodore Roosevelt was a taxidermist in his younger years. He would go and hunt birds and things, and taxidermy them in his spare time because he was a sickly child and wasnโ€™t able to go play sports. And then Walter Potter was an anthropomorphic taxidermist during the Victorian Era. He did, like, cats playing croquet and all sorts of weird stuffโ€”and, between the two of those, it kind of cultured this weird fascination with it. So on my way home from babysitting one day, I picked up a roadkill marmot, and my mom helped me skin it out with a pair of scissors and a Swiss army knife, and I have been absolutely in love with it ever since.

And do you continue to do your own pieces? Are there any for sale here in the shop?

Right now, I donโ€™t have anything that Iโ€™ve done for sale in the shop. I mostly just work the shop. I donโ€™t really have time to do taxidermy because it is really time-consuming. I do rats and mice occasionallyโ€”usually little anthropomorphic ones because everybody loves those. Like, I had a whole set of them that weโ€™re drinking coffee. My dog ate those ones, so I have to redo those.

How did the hobby transition into a business?

I was going between [the University of Nevada, Reno] and [Truckee Meadows Community College], just trying to get a degree because thatโ€™s what I thought I needed to do. My mom and I were driving through here one dayโ€”here being midtownโ€”and specifically this spot. And weโ€™d been kind of talking about starting an online store or something because itโ€™s something I enjoyed, and I found there was an uptick at the time in interest in this sort of thing. And we drove by, and there was a โ€œfor rentโ€ sign in the window, and we decided later that night that we wanted to do it. And I dropped out of college, and now Iโ€™m doing this. It happened really, really fast.

Whoโ€™s your customer base?

It varies so much. I will say mostly women, because itโ€™s home goodsโ€”itโ€™s nesting, in a way. But, honestly, it varies. One moment it will be a granddad and his grandkids, and next it will be a chick with face tattoos.

Do you ever get any push back from people who come in here?

Iโ€™ve had women scream before. Taxidermy, itโ€™s not for everyone. For the most part, if people donโ€™t like it, they donโ€™t come in. Iโ€™ve had people get a little feisty with me before, but usually after I explain where everything comes from, and I try to show my respect for it, everybody seems to appreciate that.

Sure, I mean, if you get over the simple fact that something had to die for you to get that experience.

Yeah, and thatโ€™s one thing, too, because death is so foreign in todayโ€™s culture that it is kind of a shock for some people. But I think itโ€™s one of those things, like everything dies eventually, and you may as well treat it with respect.

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