Amanda Barteck wrote:I've been following that guy that travels in the southwest on horseback with pack horses. I've been interested in primitive skills and crafts for /quite/ a while, and I've processed plant fiber before, as well as I have extensive experience camping.
I'm about to buy a general use 20ga shotgun, and I'm interested in hunting deer, but haven't done it. I have friends who hunt, and I'm looking forward to asking them for their hides while I learn how to shoot.
Naturally, if I'm able to successfully make buckskin, I would be able to expand that into other things as well. I am already a serial crafter (it's a common freebie in the neurodiverse package) and on the days I'm not working at a soul crushing job I want to work on soul feeding projects.
I'd love your favorite techniques that don't involve the brain (mother has Parkinson's, I don't want to potentially endanger her) thanks and props.
Hello Amanda!
During hunting season, it is very easy to get hides, just asks around. Most folks in my area throw the hide away. Cattle farms are another great place to ask. If they do on farm harvest, you can often get the hides on harvest day.
I have made brain tan buckskin in the past, but these days I am mostly working with hair on sheep hides.
You can do a bark tan. It is really easy, you just leave the hide soaking in a tannic bark water solution until the solution has penetrated through the hide and caused it to darken. This takes weeks or months depending on the weather and what kind of hide you are working with. When the solution has turned the hide a dark color throughout, you are ready to take it out and start working it until it is soft and dry. This method results in a stiffer product but with use, your hide will become more and more flexible.
If you prefer the brain tan technique, egg yolks work really well as a substitute for brains. You can do the same process as regular brain tanning and you will get a nice flexible hide.
I also use a pickling technique for making hides into rugs. I sprinkle the hide with salt and bakings soda and allow it to pickle slowly in cool temperatures. This results in a hide that is more supple than raw hide but stiffer than something you would use for clothing. They work great as floor coverings and can be hand washed and dried.
Good luck!
Let us know how your projects turn out.