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#1
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I have a bunch of buck tails. I soaked them in sal****er. Dried them out
and they still don't smell very good. Also I have some turkey feathers what's the best way to clean them to prevent bugs from contaminating my other materials. |
#2
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Kevin wrote:
I have a bunch of buck tails. I soaked them in sal****er. Dried them out and they still don't smell very good. Also I have some turkey feathers what's the best way to clean them to prevent bugs from contaminating my other materials. Bucktails need to be washed as soon as they're removed from the bone. They should be washed in a mixture of borax and detergent in warm water, then rinsed thoroughly under running warm water, then dried as much as possible and stretched out and the raw skin coated with a mixture of borax and salt, 50/50 that is changed periodically as it becomes dry or changes color. The tails should then be combed clean and frozen, then thawed and frozen twice more to ensure any bugs and or their eggs are completely dead. Any and all extra skin should then be trimmed away and the tails should be packed in ziploc bags and placed away from any other commercially purchased materials, just in case there were some eggs you missed. Check them periodically to see if any eggs or dead bugs show up in the bags. Turkey feathers (or other wild game) should be plucked and whatever is contaminated with blood, feces or other "organic matter" should be discarded. Any and all meat and skin needs to be removed/scraped from the quills. If they are wing or tail feathers, you shouldn't need to do much to them, but they should go through the same 2-3 freezings and thawings mentioned above and then should be packaged similarly and stored away from commercially purchased materials. If it's body feathers, just pluck what you think you might use, and package them and freeze/thaw them too. It may sound a bit anal, but the worst thing you can experience is finding a $50-60 dollar saddle chewed up by bugs because you wanted to save $3 on a bucktail or $6-7 on some turkey feathers.... Larry |
#3
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Thanks Larry
"Larry Medina" wrote in message . com... Kevin wrote: I have a bunch of buck tails. I soaked them in sal****er. Dried them out and they still don't smell very good. Also I have some turkey feathers what's the best way to clean them to prevent bugs from contaminating my other materials. Bucktails need to be washed as soon as they're removed from the bone. They should be washed in a mixture of borax and detergent in warm water, then rinsed thoroughly under running warm water, then dried as much as possible and stretched out and the raw skin coated with a mixture of borax and salt, 50/50 that is changed periodically as it becomes dry or changes color. The tails should then be combed clean and frozen, then thawed and frozen twice more to ensure any bugs and or their eggs are completely dead. Any and all extra skin should then be trimmed away and the tails should be packed in ziploc bags and placed away from any other commercially purchased materials, just in case there were some eggs you missed. Check them periodically to see if any eggs or dead bugs show up in the bags. Turkey feathers (or other wild game) should be plucked and whatever is contaminated with blood, feces or other "organic matter" should be discarded. Any and all meat and skin needs to be removed/scraped from the quills. If they are wing or tail feathers, you shouldn't need to do much to them, but they should go through the same 2-3 freezings and thawings mentioned above and then should be packaged similarly and stored away from commercially purchased materials. If it's body feathers, just pluck what you think you might use, and package them and freeze/thaw them too. It may sound a bit anal, but the worst thing you can experience is finding a $50-60 dollar saddle chewed up by bugs because you wanted to save $3 on a bucktail or $6-7 on some turkey feathers.... Larry |
#4
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I wash everything in dawn detergent in the washer in a fine lingerie bag on
gentle followed by washing w/ woolite then stretch skin and treat w/ borax and salt when dry I cut to zip lock bag size and freeze then micro for NOT MORE than 10 seconds or you will have bacon strips works for me "Kevin" wrote in message ... I have a bunch of buck tails. I soaked them in sal****er. Dried them out and they still don't smell very good. Also I have some turkey feathers what's the best way to clean them to prevent bugs from contaminating my other materials. |
#5
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"Larry Schmitt" wrote in message
gy.com... I wash everything in dawn detergent in the washer in a fine lingerie bag on gentle followed by washing w/ woolite then stretch skin and treat w/ borax and salt when dry I cut to zip lock bag size and freeze then micro for NOT MORE than 10 seconds or you will have bacon strips works for me Dawn dish washing detergent in the washing machine? Doesn't that get a bit sudsy? And be careful about mixing that Dawn with the Woolite. You may not like the results of the chemical reaction. In fact, don't mix any detergent with fabric softener. It tends to form a gooey mess. ------------------------------------------------ "If we don't succeed, we run the risk of failure." - Dan Quayle |
#6
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"Larry Schmitt" wrote in message
gy.com... I wash everything in dawn detergent in the washer in a fine lingerie bag on gentle followed by washing w/ woolite then stretch skin and treat w/ borax and salt when dry I cut to zip lock bag size and freeze then micro for NOT MORE than 10 seconds or you will have bacon strips works for me Dawn dish washing detergent in the washing machine? Doesn't that get a bit sudsy? And be careful about mixing that Dawn with the Woolite. You may not like the results of the chemical reaction. In fact, don't mix any detergent with fabric softener. It tends to form a gooey mess. ------------------------------------------------ "If we don't succeed, we run the risk of failure." - Dan Quayle |
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