what am i left with? hide an a bucket of water

The short answer is a wet slippery deer hide. Which when it dries is going to be very stiff. If I recall correctly, it has to stay immersed for a couple of weeks, and when it comes out, the hide has to be worked. Stretched flat or pulled, then neatsfoot oil rubbed into the flesh side. Do your homework, because I'm working on a half-memory and one cup of morning coffee.
 
The short answer is a wet slippery deer hide. Which when it dries is going to be very stiff. If I recall correctly, it has to stay immersed for a couple of weeks, and when it comes out, the hide has to be worked. Stretched flat or pulled, then neatsfoot oil rubbed into the flesh side. Do your homework, because I'm working on a half-memory and one cup of morning coffee.

haha,naah you're right mate.. but is it preserved? tanned? etc..

or do i have to chrome bath it to 'tan' it, i wanna backyard taxidermy my deers, an i got heaps lol. some are pickling now, in alum an salt...i've read that'l preserve em to mount.
 
Not tanned, just soaked.

As i understand, a long soak serves to make removing the hairs a lot easier.

IANAT. :)

I Am Not A Taxidermist!
 
proper tanning requires tannin. Traditionally a hide would be soaked long enough to scrape out hairs and old layers of skin before having a few months bath in water with ground up oak bark (contains the tannin). Then they'd be oiled. There are other products today...
 
yeah ive tanned hides with brains, thats a no brainer.

will look into the alum salt more, worst case putit in the chrome bath too
 
Soaking a hide for a few days in a salt and vinegar solution works much better for the 'pickling' phase. Use non-iodized salt (avoid possible brown stainingj.

I've found the hair stability depends upon the temperature the hide was exposed-to (colder is better) and the time from kill/skinning/pickling.

After pickling, apply a tanning solution along with working the hide as it dries.
 
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