The effects of slanting the base of a slender axisymmetric cylinder (length/diameter ratio of 9), aligned with the flow, was studied experimentally. The body was equipped with interchangeable rear ends covering a range of slant angles between 0° (vertical) and 70°. It was found that the base slant has a very dramatic effect on body drag, particularly in a relatively narrow range of slant angles where the drag coefficient exhibits a large local maximum (over-shoot). Detailed study of the flow showed that the drag overshoot is related to the existence of two very different Separation patterns on the slanted base. One pattern is similar to that found behind axisymmetric bodies with no base slant, and its main feature is the presence of a closed Separation region adjacent to the base. The other pattern is highly three-dimensional with two streamwise vortices forming along the sides of the slanted base. This pattern sets in very abruptly at a “critical” slant angle α ∼ 47°. Drag force measurements showed that, at first, the drag coefficient slowly increases with the slant angle, but then jumps suddenly upwards to more than double its baseline value (from CD = 0.24 to CD = 0.625) at the critical angle. At angles higher than that CD decreases again, and at 70° it is about equal to the baseline value. Further effects of the slant angle are the generation of a large side force and a significant increase in near-wake flow periodicity.