gitrdun said:
Very informative thread, I'll put it to good use for sure. I've heard of putting the skull in an ant hill (gotta wait till spring of course), coat the horns with lard. I'd be worried about critters knawing on it though. Has anyone heard of this?
I have heard of this being done. I also have the same fears as you. Even the mice chew on shed antlers to get the minerals out of them. Heck, I have a Moose paddle that had been gnawed by a Wolf or Bear! Big chew marks all over punching right through.
Okay, I give up with the bloody camera, sign me up for a course!
50% of them suck, the glass is half full though, right?
Here is one of the first ones I tried, back in 95+/-. He was shot through the head at a very long ways away, not intentionally, so I thought it would be neat to try to salvage the skull. The bullet had gone just below the eye and there was alot of bloodstain. A 19 year old has alot of other things to do with his time and I quickly gave up all hope, it ended up as you see here. I would boil a kettle of water, and pour it over the skull plate until I figured I had had enough. You can see where the blood stain (grey areas) are in the bone still.
grouseman, if I understand you right, this is close to your goal?
If so it will be very easily done and they look cool sitting on top of the television this way too.
I didn't bother doing anymore skulls until 04, I had gotten the biggest Whitetail in a few years, thought I'd do something with it so I welded up a rectangular pot, leaving three inches all around the skull to the edge of the pot and about five inches of water between the bottom of the teeth and the pot base. There I mounted a 6" pipe on the bottom with a hook to hold the tiger torch in place. It is still the same design I use now.
I let it get too hot though, and had the slender bones that support the roof of the mouth touch the edge. They pretty much turned to ashes! Also, I had basically only taken the hide off the head, the eyes out and the jaw. I figured the rest would just fall off like a boiled piece of meat falls from the bone. Wrong again, it turned to hard rubber just like our friend here with the Sea Lion skull had happen.

I called it a lesson learned and hung it up in our welding shop for the staff to enjoy....
Jump ahead a couple years. Some friends found a dead buck by their haystack. Their only worry was the coyotes would be tasting meat right by the cattle, they have no use for a deer rack!

Their loss, my gain!
Well it had been there four days or so already so it was stiff as a board.
I called up the C.O., got the okay to get it and boy did I get it, well that's another story, but the pics will tell!
Stiff , stinky, gross. That sums it up well. I managed to get the hide off, thank goodness it was froze so it wasn't rotting yet for my weak stomach to enjoy! I stuck it in a bin of warm water. Having read on the net this would encourage the bacteria to start growing, and in turn loosen the greeblies sooner. Well if she didn't stink before, she did now!

Time to go to the pot!
I fleshed most of it and boiled, and boiled, and.............
For two or three days I boiled that sucker, while adding baking soda to the hot and airated water, it made for quite a mess. You can see where the blood stained the plate joints. I needed to clean it more before the boiling. I don't want to boil it anymore because too much will make the joints loosen up and it will fall apart in worse cases!
The one thing I was careful with this one was to use a piece of 1/8" copper line with a ball valve and air supply. Bend as needed. The hot water being gargled in the sinus area is just what the doctor ordered to get the flesh loose. From time to time you can unroll the blanketing flesh from around the tunnel frames. I think this part is a sort of heat exchanger, used to warm the air as it is breathed in. Then use one of those spring loaded claw, grabby things that you use when you drop your wrench in a tight spot on your car. MIG pliers also work well.
At the time I was really happy with the outcome of this one, it was the first real success I had up to then.
The next year I got an Elk and another Deer so I wanted to see if I could do any better. I also had a three quarter curl Ram I found, which after getting the permits I finally got it back. It was real rank rotten.

By now, I had figured out that fleshing it as soon after it dies, the better. But I was still fighting with the Baking soda. Looking back I don't think it did anything but make a mess.
I finished the Elk but it took so much boiling again that it started getting weak, also little rust spots began to show in the bone.

While it was drying a guy at the shop dropped a big chunk of steel on it even after I warned him to keep away. Words don't explain those kind of feelings justly.

The Antler plate is intact still but the rest grenaded, hence no pictures of it.
Deer went by the same process and it came out pretty good. You can still see some of the fat trapped in the joint of the plates:
I had never worked with a ram before, nor a rotten stinky skull. It only had hide on the top of the forehead, hard as a brick. I had to boil it to get it cut off, the smell could have knocked you out! I had trouble getting the stains out and tries a little bit of bleach, just to see, well the pics speak for themselves. The bones got weak too, almost mush when wet so I took it out to dry and set it in the backyard for the summer. Some yellow is still left behind from the bleach. Not very happy with this one.

I soaked it over and over again with off the shelf peroxide too.
I should mention this was done with most the other heads as well, they did not look very white coming out.
And now, the one you've been waiting for! I shot this one only six days ago and did half of the fleshing on it that night. Once at work on Monday, it sat in a steel five gallon pail full of cold water. I would whittle away on breaks and after work, leaving it to soak overnight. In the morning, the blood had settled to the bottom of the pail, being drawn out of the fresh surfaces I had exposed, a nice suprise! Almost 90% of the goo was off this morning when I heated up the water. I had forgot my baking soda at home, but had brought the detergent so I just put maybe five tablespoons in each of the three charges of water I used. Heated to a hard boil, set in the rack and put the heat back on for a couple minutes, then used the copper air to gurgle a spell.
A half hour later, pulled it out, scraped of some tid bits and repeated. The fat would melt into drops and float at the surface. They never seemed to bother sticking to the skull as it was never oily to the touch. The last time I pulled it out, there was nothing to do but blow it dry with the copper line, be careful, it can knockout those sinus bones very easy.
Well how's that for a bloody blog!
Long winded but I sure hope it helps you out.
I should note that I haven't been able to get the cartlidge out from around the little ear canal, leading to the ear drum. I find it easiest to clean around the ear drum to establish its edges, then I pop them out with a screwdriver to throw them in the bush. Same goes for the canal and the little bones under the drum, inside the brain cavity. Be very careful not to try and smack the wrong bone structure! This way I can get at the brain cavity easier and there are three holes to use for figuring out a wall mount.

If I get a chance I will edit out the yellow shaded pics. I have been up 23 hrs straight now and need to try and sleep.
Any other info is more than welcome, or trouble your having too!
Take care, and best fo luck with your trophy!
Noel