Main Discussion Area > Primitive Skills
waterproofing question, cowskin
Thesquirrelslinger:
Good question. BTW go to your local health-food store. Most likely you can get beeswax about .50-1.00$ per oz. I got a 10 oz chunk for $5.
IndianGuy:
cotton wood smoke, this will make the quiver repellant to water but not water proof!
BowEd:
4dog.....I hate saying this because I've had people say it to me but this leather getting sticky to your skin on a hot day thing could have been avoided by constructing the quiver with the hair side out.Your arrows in there would be just as quiet.In fact a quiver like yours is one of the quietest types made.Now about water proofing this paticular project.If your leather was chemically tanned anyway smoking it wo'nt make any difference and most any type wood used for smoking works.I've used hickory bark on countless brain tanned hides.Without smoking white brain tan it will turn back to rawhide when it gets wet.It's the tannin in the smoke that water proofs it and most woods have that in it.The leather will absorb moisture and be wet after a rain shower on it but after it dries out you can scuff it against itself and it will soften up again.Just use your quiver.If it gets wet let it dry and scuff it against each other and it'll be fine.Everybody wants a gaurantee on things.Things do not last forever and that's the bottom line.Enjoy it for years while you own it.Melting beeswax into your leather will help to a certain degree.
4dog:
Beadman, I made it to be reversable , and to an extant it is, i just havent put a strap on the hairside, the reality is i will most likely beeswax it, and put a strap to the hairside so i can in fact reverse it , just been doing other stuff, the hair is black, darkbrown, and white, should be plenty camoed, thanks for all the advice guys. Will post a pic of it reversed soon.
M. Demetrius:
Naturally, you know that prickly pear pads resist being messed with. We've removed about 1500 sq ft of them from our extended front yard. Seems someone before we owned the property thought getting rid of them was as easy as running over them with a brush hog. Not the way to do that job, honest. ;)
Waterproofing, I'll have to try that. I guess you skin off the green part and let the glue-like sap drip into a container?
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