Re: Beaver fleshing help!!! Pics
[Re: skunky 101]
#1260986
03/18/09 08:42 AM
03/18/09 08:42 AM
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CHICKEN
Unregistered
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CHICKEN
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I try to clean skinn as I go. Takes longer but less much less scrap time....
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Re: Beaver fleshing help!!! Pics
[Re: holdengr]
#1261006
03/18/09 09:02 AM
03/18/09 09:02 AM
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Joined: Feb 2007
northern new jersey
jer z
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2007
northern new jersey
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you need to use a sharp fleshing knife.Fleshing beaver with my necker is how I leaned how to use the sharp edge. I was in the same stage as you, I just said it's now or never, and just started using the sharp edge.
Last edited by jer z; 03/18/09 09:04 AM. Reason: spelling
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Re: Beaver fleshing help!!! Pics
[Re: holdengr]
#1261011
03/18/09 09:07 AM
03/18/09 09:07 AM
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Joined: Jan 2007
kansas
possum5676
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
kansas
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Looks to me like a wonderful start on a fine beaver. Me thinks you are making it to hard to do. Go around the pelt and look and feel it over, identify all the areas that are soft and easy to flesh, make sure all those are clean, that will be easy. Next look clost where you have cut into it and made the dent like areas, thats how all of it needs to look, in other words where you got a little of it off, it needs to be all smooth and all gone right down to the leather. Scraping is fine for the soft stuff, but all that gristle needs to be sliced off with a sharp fleshing knife, start where it is clean to the leather and just keep going on a strip a few inches wode until you get on to it, when you reach across the pelt to cleaned area start over again with another strip, once you get a clean strip down to the leather across the pelt it will get much easier and you will think its a piece of cake. Any decent fleshing knife will work, it just has to have a sharp even edge, and slice dont scrape, slice dont cut little spots, slice, slice it down in a strip and you will have it, the soft rubbery problem you are having will be defeated by keeping the pelt fairly tight on the beam and the sharp knife sliceing routine as the very stuff that giving you fits is going to be rolling ahead of your blade. once you get on to it a bit the feel along of the leather will guide you and the look of what is rolling ahead of the blade.
none
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Re: Beaver fleshing help!!! Pics
[Re: GritGuy]
#1261272
03/18/09 12:08 PM
03/18/09 12:08 PM
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Joined: Mar 2009
Eastern Canada
ursus
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2009
Eastern Canada
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Looks like there is a little fat near the tail section, very job good though.
With the face I use a beaver knife and a slicing motion to get it clean, its not critical to have the face totally clean if you go at it too much its easy to cut. You can remove the lips too, instead of trying to flesh them, it can be done but if its your first it will look cleaner and be easier with the lips off. Once its boarded you can go over it gently with a beaver knife and scrape or cut off any little globs of fat/gristle.
When I fleshed my first I was very critical and kept going, I eventually cut the hide and made a mess. If I would have stopped it would have been fine. As others have said sharp good steel makes the job easier. Just get a feel for the angle and pressure.
For me, seeing the fat and gristle on the hide took time to learn. The rump and sides of the face are tricky but if you take your time on the first few and get a feeling for the knife , you get the nack pretty quick.
When fleshing beaver its important to finish an area before moving to another, you can get lost otherwise. I start behind the ears and work staright down to the rump, then I do each leg, then the belly fat and finish with the face. When I am done I don't have to go back its done, save a quick scraping once its boarded.
Once you think you have got it done nail it or hoop it and see how it dries. The areas you didn't do well will really show. Areas you thought you should have taken more off may dry just fine. Learn from it and go forward.
Wipe it down every day or so beacause no matter how good a job you do there may be a little grease come off the hide as it dries.
I think those nicks probably won't show once its dried. goodluck
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