Don B said:
Sean, et al,
Do your remarks about liming also apply to using a wood ash solution for de-hairing?
If I got the plain water route, do I just scrape the loosened hair and epidermis off with the back of a dull tool (drawknife)? Will treated city water work or should I use lake water?
Thanks for your advice.
Don
Don,
Yes, I was talking about the dehairing process. At least for deer and similar sized critters you don't need the lime or wood ash. Start it soaking on Sunday and scrape it the next Saturday. I use a piece of scrap hot rolled steel for a scraper, but the drawnife will work fine. Take the hair off first unless their are large chunks of meat or fat that make it tough to scrape that section. Take those off so you don't cut the hide when scraping the hair. The epidermis is the op layer of skin and it will appear darker than the rest of the hide. Its much thinner than paper. It has to come off so the dressing can penetrate. I do the whole center part of the hide leaving the last 2-3 inches and then go around carefully scraping the edges working from center to edge.
Once the hair and the epidermis come off, flip and scrape the meat, fat and connective tissue off. This is a lot easier. Just be careful scraping the areas near the tail, the armpits and loins, because they are thinner and tear easily. Work the edges the same way you do the hair.
I dress hides by mixing a good squirt of dish detergent for the emulsifier and a cup or two of cheap corn oil in the place of brains or neatsfoot oil. I've tried several things and can't tell the difference. Mix that with hot water in a bucket, just hot enough you can still put your hand in it. Work the hide around in it a bit and I usually let it set overnight covered.
Then the fun starts. Work and stretch that sucker until its really dry and supple. wring the manure out of it first. Get as much water out of it as you can before you start. I find the
[url] Braintan.com[/url] way of using the steel cable to be too hard on my arms and shoulders. Make up a frame and a paddle.
When you get to smoking it, just be careful to keep it from getting to hot.
Hope that helps.
Sean