Well, I got back to it tonight, and definitely learned a few things. There were some spots where the hairs almost fell off, and other spots where I had to put quite a bit of pressure on and ended up gouging the epidermis. I ended up leaving those spots and put the hide back in the water to see if soaking for another day helps it at all. I will probably end up having to do a dry scrape anyway, because there are spots where the finer undercoat hairs would not scrape off.
Lessons learned so far:-I should have left it in the lye solution at least another day (which would have been 48 hours rather than 24). You shouldn't have to tug the hair off, it should come off with hardly any pressure at all.
-I should have stirred it more to ensure the whole hide was absorbing the same amount of lye (I stirred it 4 times over the first 24 hours, but didn't stir it at all over the following 2 days that it was soaking in plain water). It probably would have helped to weigh the hide down to keep it submerged (as Leroy seems to have also learned the hard way
)
-Cold weather (unheated garage with snow on the ground) doesn't seem to hinder the action of the lye (although it sure makes your fingers numb when scraping a wet hide with rubber gloves on
)
A couple questions I've been pondering - is there any benefit to removing the epidermis? Or is that just a side effect of dry-scraping?
Also, I've read that if you leave the hide a little looser on the drying rack, you will end up with a more transparent hide. Can anyone confirm this?
...It was in my basement during winter...Also, the water was quite...pleasant by the time they were finished soaking.
ha ha
I'm not sure that would go over very well at my house. I ran it by the lady of the house and she almost barfed just thinking about it! I figure she was just too sheltered as a child...