Survivopedia
  • HOME
  • GENERAL PREP
    • All
    • Disaster Scenarios
    • EMP
    • Natural Disasters
    • Survival News
    • Survival Skills
    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    When Hope Feels Distant: Survival Lessons from Faithful Generations

    Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

    Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

    Raising Strong Kids in a Weak Culture

    Natural Anti-Inflammatories That Store for Years

    What If the Power Grid Goes Down Tomorrow?

    What If the Power Grid Goes Down Tomorrow?

    What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

    What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

    Bugging In vs. Bugging Out: What Historic Cultures Would Choose

    Why We Prep

    • SHTF SCENARIOS
      • Survival Skills
      • Disaster Scenarios
      • Natural Disasters
      • WATER
      • FINANCIAL
      • WAR & CONFLICTS
      • emp
    • EQUIPMENT
      • Bug-Out-Vehicle
      • Firearms
      • COMMUNICATION
    • ENERGY
      • ENERGY
      • Energy Sources
      • Electric Equipments
      • Consumption Control
  • WEAPONS
    • All
    • Cold Weapons
    • Firearms
    • Regulations
    Field Reloading

    Field Reloading

    Fully Automatic Firearms? No Thanks!

    Are Alternative Weapons Practical in a Post-Disaster World?

    How To Travel With A Firearm

    The Ultimate Survival Knife: How to Pick the Right One

    A Sharp Edge: Choosing the Best Survival Knife for Prepping and Self-Defense

    Is There a Place for “Fast Draw” in Survival?

    Indispensable Gear for your EDC Core Layer

    Best 17 silent weapons for when SHTF

    Best 17 silent weapons for when SHTF

    • Firearms
    • Cold Weapons
    • Defense
    • Privacy & Data Protection
    • Regulations
  • FOOD
    • All
    • Cooking
    • Farm Animals
    • Food Storage
    • Hunting
    • Plants & Gardening
    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    8 Medicinal Plants the Native Americans Used for Survival

    Catching and Preserving Fish in Survival Situations

    Herbal and Alternative Antibiotics

    Heirloom Vegetables and Seeds

    Heirloom Vegetables and Seeds

    How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In

    How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In

    9 Composting Mistakes – All that Stands Between You and Black Gold

    9 Composting Mistakes – All that Stands Between You and Black Gold

    This Is Why The Amish Will Not Go Hungry During A Crisis

    This Is Why The Amish Will Not Go Hungry During A Crisis

    Eating Snake Meat – The Dos and Don’ts

    • Food Storage
    • Cooking
    • Farm Animals
    • Hunting
    • Plants & Gardening
  • Store
  • Newsletter
  • HOME
  • GENERAL PREP
    • All
    • Disaster Scenarios
    • EMP
    • Natural Disasters
    • Survival News
    • Survival Skills
    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    When Hope Feels Distant: Survival Lessons from Faithful Generations

    Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

    Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

    Raising Strong Kids in a Weak Culture

    Natural Anti-Inflammatories That Store for Years

    What If the Power Grid Goes Down Tomorrow?

    What If the Power Grid Goes Down Tomorrow?

    What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

    What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

    Bugging In vs. Bugging Out: What Historic Cultures Would Choose

    Why We Prep

    • SHTF SCENARIOS
      • Survival Skills
      • Disaster Scenarios
      • Natural Disasters
      • WATER
      • FINANCIAL
      • WAR & CONFLICTS
      • emp
    • EQUIPMENT
      • Bug-Out-Vehicle
      • Firearms
      • COMMUNICATION
    • ENERGY
      • ENERGY
      • Energy Sources
      • Electric Equipments
      • Consumption Control
  • WEAPONS
    • All
    • Cold Weapons
    • Firearms
    • Regulations
    Field Reloading

    Field Reloading

    Fully Automatic Firearms? No Thanks!

    Are Alternative Weapons Practical in a Post-Disaster World?

    How To Travel With A Firearm

    The Ultimate Survival Knife: How to Pick the Right One

    A Sharp Edge: Choosing the Best Survival Knife for Prepping and Self-Defense

    Is There a Place for “Fast Draw” in Survival?

    Indispensable Gear for your EDC Core Layer

    Best 17 silent weapons for when SHTF

    Best 17 silent weapons for when SHTF

    • Firearms
    • Cold Weapons
    • Defense
    • Privacy & Data Protection
    • Regulations
  • FOOD
    • All
    • Cooking
    • Farm Animals
    • Food Storage
    • Hunting
    • Plants & Gardening
    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

    8 Medicinal Plants the Native Americans Used for Survival

    Catching and Preserving Fish in Survival Situations

    Herbal and Alternative Antibiotics

    Heirloom Vegetables and Seeds

    Heirloom Vegetables and Seeds

    How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In

    How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In

    9 Composting Mistakes – All that Stands Between You and Black Gold

    9 Composting Mistakes – All that Stands Between You and Black Gold

    This Is Why The Amish Will Not Go Hungry During A Crisis

    This Is Why The Amish Will Not Go Hungry During A Crisis

    Eating Snake Meat – The Dos and Don’ts

    • Food Storage
    • Cooking
    • Farm Animals
    • Hunting
    • Plants & Gardening
  • Store
  • Newsletter
No Result
View All Result
Survivopedia
No Result
View All Result
Home FOOD

Old Skills Revived: How To Tan A Deer Hide

32919634 - row of wild animal skins hanging from a rope - craft tanned skin of an ancient tannery

32919634 - row of wild animal skins hanging from a rope - craft tanned skin of an ancient tannery

You’ve shot the deer, or maybe you’ve butchered a cow or one of the rabbits that you’ve raised. You’ve field dressed it and butchered it, but you have no idea what to do with a hide. For the most part, hides are discarded, and that’s not only a waste of a valuable commodity, it’s disrespectful to the animal.

The problem is that having a hide tanned is expensive, but why not tan the hide yourself?

There are many different ways to tan a hide, but traditionally, it was done using brains. Since that’s probably not the method that most people would use, that’s an article for another day. There are also tanning methods that require harsh chemicals, and we aren’t ever going to write that article because it’s not what we’re about.

As preppers, we want to be able to use what we have on hand, and though some of these may require an initial trip to the drugstore or superstore, everything is readily available.

Now, the next question is whether or not you want to tan your hide with the hair on or the hair off. If you leave the hair on, it’s a great decorative item, or can be used to build a shelter, make a coat or a pair of boots, or just about anything else that you can think of. If you decide to take the hair off, you have leather that you can use for endless purposes.

Removing the hair requires some extra steps, but we’ll cover both ways. I’d like to make a suggestion here. It may be a good idea to try this with something small like a rabbit hide because a full deer hide can be a bit overwhelming for your first time.

If you’re tanning a cow hide, consider at least cutting it in half down the spine. Quartering it will make it even more manageable. The process for any hide is essentially the same with the exception of drying times. Obviously, bigger, thicker hides will take longer to soak and dry than little rabbit hides will.

What You’ll Need to Tan a Hide

We’re going to focus on tanning a deer hide to keep things relatively manageable but within the broad range of animals that most people hunt.

You’re going to need non-iodized salt, ammonia alum, and neat’s-foot oil. If you’re removing the hair, you’ll also need hydrated lime powder and wood ashes. If you’re dealing with a hide with greasy hair, such as a bear, you’ll need to degrease the hide too, but that’s a messy job that we’re not going to get into here.

Prepping the Hide for Tanning

OK, now that you’ve skinned the deer, you can either head directly into the tanning process or store the hide until the weather warms up, which is a good idea because you’re going to be working outside in water. Do you really want to do that in freezing weather?

Also, a frozen hide is much harder to work with than a warm one is. Another reason to wait is that the first step, salting, helps soften the meat and makes it easier to remove it from the hide.

We’re starting with a freshly-butchered hide. Salt the back side (non-hair side) liberally, then roll the hide up with the hair on the outside and put it in a garbage bag, then freeze it. You can also leave it to air dry, but if you do this, be ready to remove the meat within a few days.

Here’s an example of salting:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cy6hRz3wY30

Video first seen on Starry Hilder.

When you’re ready to tan the hide, remove the hide from the bag, unroll it, and begin removing the meat from the back of the hide. You want to get all of the flesh off the hide so that all you have left is the hide. Use a dull knife, a paint scraper, a putty knife or some other tool sharp enough to scrape but not sharp enough to cut the hide.

Carefully scrape all of the meat off the hide, then resalt the hide, roll it back up, and refrigerate it for 3 or 4 days. Remove the hide, give it one more good scraping, then rinse the hide in water to remove the salt. Hang it up to drain.

Now you’re ready to tan the hide if you’re leaving the hair on. If so, skip the next step.

Remove the Hair from the Hide

For this step, you’re going to need a garbage can. Put the hide in the garbage can and cover it with a solution made of water, hydrated lime, and wood ashes. Use 1/4 cup lime and 1/2 cup ashes per gallon of water. Stir it around every couple of days and when the hair is starting to slip off the hide, remove it from the water.

Use your dull scraping tool to remove the hair from the hide. If there are still spots where the hair won’t come off, put the hide back in the solution for a couple more days. Once you have all of the hair off, rinse the hide in a boric acid solution to neutralize the lime.

Use around 1/8 cup of boric acid per gallon of water in the now-clean garbage can. Swirl the hide around as much as you can and drain and repeat a few times, then move forward to the next step to start actually tanning your hide.

Tan the Hide

Now that you’ve got the hide ready to tan, let’s get to it. Mix a solution of alum and salt using 1/2 pound of salt and 1/4 pound of alum per gallon of water. Cover the hide with the solution and let it set for 4 days to a week. Stir daily to keep the mixture evenly distributed and the hide covered.

After a week, remove the hide from the solution and rinse it well with clean running water. Hang it up to drain, but don’t let it dry completely. You’re almost finished tanning the hide, but you’ve got some elbow grease ahead of you!

Oil and Soften the Hide

At this point, the hide is still going to be fairly stiff. You’re about to change that, and this is the part where starting with a smaller hide, or a hide cut into pieces, is going to make your life easier.

While the hide is still damp, rub neat’s-foot oil into the flesh side of the hide and stretch it in all directions. Let that soak in, and apply another lighter treatment of neat’s-foot oil. Work it by rubbing it over the edge of a sawhorse, worktable, chair, or anything sturdy with an edge.

Make sure that you get the whole hide because this step breaks down the grain of the leather, which is critical to soften and tan the hide.

Keep working the hide until it’s soft and supple. You may need to use a dowel, the end of a mallet, or some other smaller, smooth tool to work out tougher spots. If the leather starts to dry out and crack as you’re working it, add more neat’s-foot oil.

Finish Tanning the Hide

The final step to tanning the hide is to smooth the flesh side with fine-grit sandpaper. This will get rid of any rough spots and make it nice and soft to the touch.

That’s it. Now you know how to tan your own hide. There are many directions that you can go with the hide now, but you’ve got a tanned hide to work with.

One cool bit of history is that the Native Americans used the hides on their teepees so that the smoke would waterproof them. Just a factoid. Another ancient secrets of survival are available now for you, just click on the banner below to find out more about them!

the lost ways cover

If you’ve ever tanned your own hide, please share your experience with us below, and if you have any tips to make the job easier, we’d love to hear about it. Even seasoned tanners can learn from others!

This article has been written by Theresa Crouse for Survivopedia.

Tags: animalshomesteadingself-sufficiency
ShareTweet
Previous Post

How To Store Flour, Sugar And Rice For Survival

Next Post

Prep Blog Review: Getting Back To DIY Projects

Theresa Crouse

Theresa Crouse

Theresa Crouse is a full-time writer currently living in central Florida. She was born and raised in the hills of West Virginia, where she learned to farm, hunt, fish, and live off the land from an early age. She prefers to live off the grid as much as possible and does her best to follow the “leave nothing behind but footprints” philosophy. For fun, she enjoys shooting, kayaking, tinkering on her car and motorcycle, and just about anything else that involves water, going fast, or the outdoors.

Related Posts

Food Storage Methods Across Cultures
Food Security

Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

September 23, 2025
Alternative Medicine

8 Medicinal Plants the Native Americans Used for Survival

September 12, 2025
Food Security

Catching and Preserving Fish in Survival Situations

August 12, 2025
Alternative Medicine

Herbal and Alternative Antibiotics

September 5, 2025
Heirloom Vegetables and Seeds
Food Security

Heirloom Vegetables and Seeds

August 19, 2025
How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In
Bug In Plan

How To Stash Water When You’re Bugging In

August 12, 2025
Next Post
DIY

Prep Blog Review: Getting Back To DIY Projects

Comments 9

  1. Meathead says:
    9 years ago

    I’ve tanned squirrel skins and as disgusting as it sounds, I used urine just as they did in Europe centuries ago. Europeans would collect their urine in pots and sell it to the tannery. Hence, the saying, “Doesn’t have a pot to pee in” to describe a poor person.
    1. Thoroughly clean the flesh from the hide by scraping with a dull tool that will remove the flesh without damaging the hide.
    2. Soak the hide in urine in a closed container for 10 to 20 days (the thicker the hide, the longer to soak).
    3. Rinse the hide thoroughly to remove the urine. Failure to do so will result in the hide smelling, especially when it gets damp in the rain.
    4. Soak the hide in a baking soda solution (¼ cup per gallon) for 48 to 72 hours to neutralize the Uric acid.
    5. Let the hide dry to the point that it is slightly damp and still pliable.
    6. Generously rub in the Neatsfoot Oil on the flesh side of the hide (Neatsfoot Oil is a yellow oil rendered and purified from the shin bones and feet of cattle). If there are “hard spots”, gently pound those spots with a hard rubber mallet until soft.
    7. Allow the hide to completely dry. If not soft and pliable, treat with more Neatsfoot Oil until soft. Again, allow the hide to thoroughly dry.

    Reply
  2. Wolfbrother says:
    9 years ago

    All in all a good article.

    The picky part of me yields:
    Videos are nice. Downloadable PDFs are nice. What would also be nice would have been a series of still shots from the video. After all, videos do not print out very well.

    Other discussions along this line
    Hair on tanning.
    Brain tanning
    Pre and Post tanning smoking of the hide.

    Reply
  3. G. C. STOVER says:
    9 years ago

    I have a neighbor who does all types of hunting for sport.

    He says just soak the hides in antifreeze. How does that work?

    Reply
  4. Charles Buchanan says:
    9 years ago

    This is nice to have. However, in a survival situation or when the SHTF where are you going to get boric acid and hydrated lime? How did the native american people do it? I am sure they did not have these things available. Though they probably used something similiar. Brains to tan?

    Reply
    • Keven Strickland says:
      9 years ago

      They used the brains of the animal to tan the hide. Each animal has enough of its brain to tan it’s hide. You add a little bit of water to the brain & mix it together then rub it all over the hide

      Reply
  5. Sis. Brandy says:
    9 years ago

    Blessings Theresa…I have a question…that has nothing to do with tanning a deer…I have learned much from you guys that has served in augmenting my preps!
    I need help in locating something…having tried…I am at a lost…If you can find this it would be so helpful to me and perhaps you will share the info with our fellow preppers …OK…I have anal rehydration salts and delivery system…I also have been able to purchase IV fluids for emergencies which will surely come…but have been UNABLE to find and buy the IV line with needle to deliver IV fluids…(without a license) …can you help?

    Reply
    • Wolfbrother says:
      9 years ago

      No first hand experience, others I’ve discussed stuff with have sung praises about Veterinary supply places. Google can be your friend in that.

      Reply
  6. Richard Crum says:
    8 years ago

    Great information thank you.

    Reply
  7. Keith Jensen says:
    5 years ago

    I tanned a deer hide with ivory soap. Dissolve a double bar of ivory soap in about 3 gallons of water in a plastic bucket. Soak dehaired and scraped deer hide in solution, turn and work around at least once a day. Continue until you can squeeze solution through the hide like it was cheesecloth. Rinse all the soap out and break the hide. Hide will be snow white and soft as felt. Smoke as you would buckskin to prevent hardening when it gets wet.
    this was described as whiteman’s buckskin in a book from the 1930s.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Keith Jensen Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

September 23, 2025

Bugging In vs. Bugging Out: What Historic Cultures Would Choose

September 12, 2025
What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

What the Ukraine War Taught Us About Civilian Survival

September 3, 2025

When Hope Feels Distant: Survival Lessons from Faithful Generations

September 5, 2025
Top 6 Survival Rifles And Why You Need One

Top 6 Survival Rifles And Why You Need One

428
Top 5 Bug Out Locations In The US

Top 5 Bug Out Locations In The US

257
Top 10 Vehicles For Your EMP Survival

Top 10 Vehicles For Your EMP Survival

162
10 Items You Need To Hoard

10 Items You Need To Hoard

148
Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

September 23, 2025

When Hope Feels Distant: Survival Lessons from Faithful Generations

September 5, 2025
Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

Packing a Family Vehicle for Long-Term Bug-Out Living

September 5, 2025

Raising Strong Kids in a Weak Culture

September 3, 2025











Recent Articles

Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

Food Storage Methods Across Cultures

September 23, 2025

When Hope Feels Distant: Survival Lessons from Faithful Generations

September 5, 2025
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms&Conditions
  • Blogroll
  • Contact
  • Newsletter

© SURVIVOPEDIA.COM

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • GENERAL PREP
    • SHTF SCENARIOS
      • Survival Skills
      • Disaster Scenarios
      • Natural Disasters
      • WATER
      • FINANCIAL
      • WAR & CONFLICTS
      • emp
    • EQUIPMENT
      • Bug-Out-Vehicle
      • Firearms
      • COMMUNICATION
    • ENERGY
      • ENERGY
      • Energy Sources
      • Electric Equipments
      • Consumption Control
  • WEAPONS
    • Firearms
    • Cold Weapons
    • Defense
    • Privacy & Data Protection
    • Regulations
  • FOOD
    • Food Storage
    • Cooking
    • Farm Animals
    • Hunting
    • Plants & Gardening
  • Store
  • Newsletter

© SURVIVOPEDIA.COM