Primitive Archer

Information and Resources => Trading Post => Topic started by: Cloudfeather on April 11, 2015, 04:34:43 pm

Title: Clean osage stave for sturgeon skin...
Post by: Cloudfeather on April 11, 2015, 04:34:43 pm
Trying to get a decent size set of sturgeon skins. Preferably big enough to get two strips from each side. Have some clean osage staves a little over 6 feet in length.
Title: Re: Clean osage stave for sturgeon skin...
Post by: Tracker0721 on April 15, 2015, 02:50:31 pm
Sturgeon skins are worth a osage stave? I need to tell my dad to start saving em!
Title: Re: Clean osage stave for sturgeon skin...
Post by: Stringman on April 15, 2015, 05:50:33 pm
The value comes from the prep work as well as the size. Catch em, clean em, dry em, offer em up for trade.
Title: Re: Clean osage stave for sturgeon skin...
Post by: Cloudfeather on April 16, 2015, 10:54:05 am
I'd say so. I've been wanting some for a while. It's easy enough for me to get carp or catfish skins where I'm at. Sturgeon, not so much. lol
Title: Re: Clean osage stave for sturgeon skin...
Post by: PEARL DRUMS on April 16, 2015, 11:45:33 am
There is a right way to dry and prep any skins, and a wrong way. The right way is easily worth a decent stave, the wrong way is worth a toss in the garbage can. Been there done that.
Title: Re: Clean osage stave for sturgeon skin...
Post by: Tracker0721 on April 16, 2015, 08:42:19 pm
Same as snake skin right? Not to hijack this, but just skin, tack to a board, leave out of the sun with some good air flow for a couple weeks.
Title: Re: Clean osage stave for sturgeon skin...
Post by: Fred Arnold on April 16, 2015, 10:24:40 pm
And if you have an extra skin I'd offer the same. Not trying to hijack your thread Cloudfeather. I'm close to osage country and miles and miles from sturgeon water. About the only thing I'm liable to catch is carp, catfish, bullheads, or a cold.
Title: Re: Clean osage stave for sturgeon skin...
Post by: wizardgoat on April 17, 2015, 03:12:37 am
Fish skins really need to be scraped well, especially the thicker ones like sturgeon. And especially for sturgeon the skins need to be tacked up so the pattern runs straight, and use lots of tacks. A good tack job is the difference between backing 1 or 2 bows, to 3 and maybe even 4 on a big pair.