SignGuy said:
Noel said:I used salt and Alum on my Elk hide last year. FYI, you can get alum cheap like borsch at Extra Foods, just takes a day or two to get it in large quantities.
As for the hide, I had a real hard time devoting the required time to it to give it a fair chance. The hide was dried after the alum solution with neats foot oil added to it. It smells like it laid outside the dumpster for the deep fryer at KFC. It is so stiff I had to drive over it with my 3/4 ton to flatten it!
BBB, did you have to "break the fibers" after the alum solution to make the tail flexible after?
Noel
jjohnwm said:I tried a do-it-yourself tanning job on last years deer hide (why not, when you can't find a hats-for-hides depot if your life depended on it?) and I have to say it turned out pretty good. TONS of work, though. Between fleshing and working the hide to soften it, I hate to think how many hours I've got invested. The solution came from an American company called Van Dykes Taxidermy, who will send out a very interesting catalog if you e-mail them.
A neat one-time project, but I doubt that I'd do it again, certainly not before I retire.
Good luck.
John