Any reference terms for frozen hide?
Billy Maxwell
bmaxwell at mt.net
Sun Feb 11 08:04:18 UTC 2007
Jim,
Thank you for that heads up! Nothing was in Riggs either, but as you
said a switch in a prefix...
Your story is making me hungry for green eggs and ham. Must go rush
neighbor's Angus on to the ice of the Missouri
just out the door. Billy
Here is a more detail example of how to process works:
I (Billy Metcalf) softened two deer hides today that I brained and
freeze dried while we
were having a cold spell. When I thawed them they were completely dry,
then
they laid around my shop for a couple of weeks. They were white and
pretty
flexible. Yesterday I misted them real good with a spray bottle then
put
them in a plastic bag over night. Today I pulled them over a cable for
about
a half hour each then put them in frames and worked them some more to
make
them lay flat and get a little bigger. All together I spent about an
hour
and a half softening them and they were done. Soft.
billymetcalf at telus.net
On Feb 10, 2007, at 8:19 PM, <goodtracks at peoplepc.com> wrote:
> Bill:
> I thought the replies from different ones were interesting and
> appreciated the sharing of the information, although they did not turn
> up a frozen hide term. I looked in my own JODorsey files for possible
> IOM terms. There are a number of terms that concern tanning, treating
> a hide, but nothing that suggests a special frozen processing.
> However, as you know, by using an instrumental prefix, one process may
> be changed to another. For IOM the prefix da- concerns an action
> done by heat or freezing.
> A Hidatsa elder shared with me 40 years ago, that when he was a child,
> that in the winter, buffalo would sometimes misjudge the frozen ice on
> the river to cross. At times, they fell through the ice and drowned.
> In the spring of the year when the ice began to melt, the people would
> pull out the buffalo carcass even when in stages of putrid decay, if I
> recall correctly. I was told that the steaks cut from such frozen
> animals were exceedingly tender and delicious. I am thinking that the
> story bears credence towards your information on tanning frozen hides,
> that were exceptionally soft and of superiour quality.
> Jimm
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