Van Dyke's Taxidermy Supplies sells a "Curatan Kit" . It's enough to tan a deer hide and it's $12.99. It has everything you need and comes with complete instructions. You can look it up at vandykestaxidermy.com. (item number BN-01508983)
2006-11-19 13:56:37
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answer #1
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answered by geobert24 5
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i'm an Alaskan trapper. My entire front room is adorned with endure, caribou, wolf, coyote, fox, and land otters. Dan B nailed it. between the final tactics of tanning is to place the conceal right into a great laundry like dryer that has no warmth and if packed with hardwood timber chips. The conceal is tumbled for days - this the two cleans the fur and makes the conceal very versatile. (the degree earlier that is to skinny the conceal if necessary). This conceal could have soaked and wiped sparkling of any salt or chemical ingredients and hung dried earlier the thinning and tumbling technique. Yours sounds like a uncooked conceal - or - a conceal that become 'homestead tanned' and never had a first rate rinse and tumble. uncooked hides could nicely be wiped sparkling alright and 'air dried' - it is what a tannery will want. Or, the golf green hunter will take a conceal that still has some meat, fat etc and upload salt to kill micro organism from thriving on the proteins. look on the conceal. look for tiny indicators of dried up meat and fat - this could be a lifeless provide away of an air dried conceal. look for salt crystals - any salt (I suspose you may desire to tatste it, huh) could be a divulge to a uncooked conceal as a results of fact there could be no salt what-so-ever in a finished conceal. Me ...... i'm leaning in the direction of this being a house tanned conceal. in case you dont locate any sign of salt or meat jerky on the conceal ingredient, then it become fleshed precise and could desire to be homestead tanned - it only want in undemanding terms a sprint greater ending. you are able to flow to a community wood worker or lumber mill and a few moslty hardwood sawdust - you in undemanding terms opt for to ward off the greater often than not pine sawdust as a results of sap - or purchase it at a puppy keep - and tumble this fur in it. Get a great trash bag, unload the conceal and sawdust in, and roll that ingredient around for awhile. unload out the sawdust and do it a 2d time. You dont opt for to be rubbing the fur ingredient. reliable good fortune!
2016-12-30 15:21:38
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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If you can't get it done professionally, I'd advise you to forget it. This advice is simply because deer have course hair not fur. The hair being brittle, tends to break off with the least provocation, no matter how well prepaired the skin is. Even the best professional jobs can't hold up to handling or flexion. Good luck.
2006-11-19 05:13:56
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answer #3
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answered by Enigma®Ragnarökin' 7
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I'd definitely go with a taxidermist on that.I've heard a lot of stories of the hair coming out of the hide after time.Personally I like to get hides done with the hair of so I have a nice piece of leather to make things with.
2006-11-20 01:31:49
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answer #4
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answered by Vtmtnman 4
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you want to look up deer tanning hair on on the internet theres to many recipes to get into here google it find a cheap one
2006-11-19 09:45:50
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answer #5
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answered by zxcv 2
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Salting or pickling.Call a furrier or a taxidermist .The process is unreliable if you are inexperienced.And over time doesn't hold up well.
2006-11-19 03:23:47
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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